St Michael & St James
Church Stowe, Northamptonshire | NN7 4SG
St Michael’s church is in the parish of Stowe Nine Churches, originally simply Stowe meaning ‘Christian Holy Place’.
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Church Stowe, Northamptonshire | NN7 4SG
St Michael’s church is in the parish of Stowe Nine Churches, originally simply Stowe meaning ‘Christian Holy Place’.
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Bugbrooke, Northamptonshire | NN7 3PB
The first documentary evidence for the existence of Bugbrooke is the Domesday Book of 1086, although there is no reference to there being a church then.
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Llandudno, Gwynedd | LL30 2NN
St John's is a grade II listed church built in 1866. It has a beautiful calm interior with a hammer beam wooden intricately carved ceiling and fascinating modern stained glass windows, including one of John Wesley preaching in the market place.
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Fawsley, Northamptonshire | NN11 3BS
A romantic church that stands alone, shorn of its former medieval village, looking out across the Capability Brown landscape of 1760’s toward Fawsley Hall, the seat of the Knightley family and now a country hotel.
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Easton Maudit, Northamptonshire | NN29 7NR
Lord Alwyne's Minton tiles on the floor are immediately apparent, but you do not come here for the architecture, which is nothing out of the ordinary, but rather for the tombs.
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Studley, Warwickshire | B80 7NJ
Built of brick, it has the worship area on the upper floor, reached by a flight of six external stone steps, under a portico with a roof supported on stone pillars.
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Feckenham, Worcestershire | B97 5PY
It is believed that the present building has its origins in 12th century but there was probably an earlier Anglo Saxon or even Celtic church, for the boundary of the original churchyard forms an almost perfect circle, a feature shared with many churches of known Celtic origin.
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Snitterfield, Warwickshire | CV37 0LF
Much of this church was built during the 13th and 14th centuries; the tower was built in at least two distinct phases, with construction interrupted by the Black Death.
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Great Paxton, Cambridgeshire | PE19 6RJ
Stunning Anglo-Saxon church in Cambridgeshire which Pevsner describes as 'the interior is not only a surprise, it is also an architectural shock of a high order'.
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Gyffin, Clwyd | LL32 8HN
St Benedict’s is a charming small church on an ancient site, part of which dates to the 12th century with well preserved 15th century vaulted ceiling paintings.
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Little Paxton, Cambridgeshire | PE19 6EY
A 900 year old Grade II* building with great architecture and modern facilities which is open every day for community events.
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Elsing, Norfolk | NR20 3EA
Built for Sir Hugh Hastings, this church has the widest nave in East Anglia with no aisles or columns a splendid uninterrupted space along with the magnificent memorial brass are just two of the many historic features of this 14th century church.
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