Piscina - Parish Church of St. Bartholomew, Wanbor…
Window - Parish Church of St. Bartholomew
Window - Parish Church of St. Bartholomew
The Great Barn, Wanborough, Surrey
All Saints Church Godshill - the medieval door
All Saints Church Godshill - the medieval door int…
All Saints Church Godshill - a carved roof springe…
All Saints Church Godshill - a Consecration Cross
All Saints Church Godshill - the south nave
Church of St Laurence, Seale - church tower
Church of St Laurence, Seale, Farnham, Surrey; Por…
Church of St Laurence, Seale - the font
Church of St Laurence, Seale - South porch
Chancel East window - Church of St George Arreton
Window - Parish Church of St. Bartholomew
Window - Parish Church of St. Bartholomew
Window - Parish Church of St. Bartholomew
DSC 2291a Window and wall detail - St Bartholomew…
Parish Church of St. Bartholomew
The Great Barn, Wanborough, Surrey - interior
The Great Barn, Wanborough, Surrey
The Great Barn, Wanborough - interior
DSC 2313 The Great Barn, Wanborough
DSC 2312 The granary Wanborough
Victorian Post Box
The Great Barn, Wanborough, Surrey
A mortuary chest at Winchester Cathedral.
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
175 visits
Window - Parish Church of St. Bartholomew
Parish Church of St. Bartholomew, Wanborough, Surrey
This village church is one of the smallest in Surrey, measuring only
13.5 m by 5.5 m internally. It is of Saxon origin with Domesday Survey
evidence of a church exisiting during the reign of Edward the Confessor
It was originally built around 1060 replacing an earlier wooden Saxon church.
The present church being a 13th Century reconstruction by the monks of Waverley Abbey
and a later restoration of 1861.
Thus the various walls and windows have significantly different heritage.
The Victorian west brick wall now supports an external bell.
NIKON d5100, Tamron 18-270mm
This village church is one of the smallest in Surrey, measuring only
13.5 m by 5.5 m internally. It is of Saxon origin with Domesday Survey
evidence of a church exisiting during the reign of Edward the Confessor
It was originally built around 1060 replacing an earlier wooden Saxon church.
The present church being a 13th Century reconstruction by the monks of Waverley Abbey
and a later restoration of 1861.
Thus the various walls and windows have significantly different heritage.
The Victorian west brick wall now supports an external bell.
NIKON d5100, Tamron 18-270mm
, Kaunos, have particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2024
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.