edale church peak district countryside picturesque graves grave yard grave yard trees spire roof grass green English perfect idyllic framed tree age old established wedding funeral religion religious graves graveyard grave yard tomb headstones head stone stones spire quaint
Church of St Andrew and St Cuthman; Steyning; Parish; West Sussex; Norman; Church; churchyard; graves; gravestone; tower; hermit; Anglo-Saxon; religious; architecture
Description
This Church was said to have been founded by The Anglo-Saxon hermit - St Cuthman - in the 8th or early 9th Century.
Church Gate; gate ; Grave Yard; Graves; Church; Religious; Yard; Offwell; st Mary the virgin; village; Worship; Grieving; Burial; Head Stones; Flowers; Cross; east Devon; antrowephotography; antrowe; anthony rowe
Edington; Priory; Church; Religion; Religious; St Mary; Saint; St Katherine; Wiltshire; Salisbury Plain; Village; Rural; 14th Century; Architecture; Architectural; christian; Christianity; holy; place of worship; god; jesus; church of england; c of e; clock; clock tower; bell; bell tower; stone; grave; graves; graveyard; churchyard; burial; buried; holy cross; cross; weather vane; flag pole; kissing gate; wooden gate; Ethandun; King Alfred the Great; Anglo Saxon; Kingdom of Wessex; Streetscape; west country; the west country; typical english scene; building; buildings
Description
Edington Priory Church, The Priory Church of Saint Mary, Saint Katharine and All Saints, is situated in the small Wiltshire village of Edington which lies below the northern escarpment of Salisbury Plain. It was built in 1361 by William of Edington, the Bishop of Winchester.
Edington; Priory; Church; Religion; Religious; St Mary; Saint; St Katherine; Wiltshire; Salisbury Plain; Village; Rural; 14th Century; Architecture; Architectural; christian; christianity; holy; place of worship; god; jesus; church of england; c of e; clock; clock tower; bell; bell tower; stone; grave; graves; graveyard; churchyard; burial; buried; weather vane; flagpole; daffodils; spring; Ethandun; King Alfred the Great; Anglo Saxon; Kingdom of Wessex; Streetscape
Description
Edington Priory Church, The Priory Church of Saint Mary, Saint Katharine and All Saints, is situated in the small Wiltshire village of Edington which lies below the northern escarpment of Salisbury Plain. It was built in 1361 by William of Edington, the Bishop of Winchester.
Grave Yard; Graves; Church; Religious; Yard; Offwell; St Mary The Virgin; Village; Worship; Grieving; Burial; Head Stones; Flowers; Cross; East Devon; Antrowephotography; Antrowe; Anthony Rowe
St. Mary's, Stiffkey, Norfolk, East Anglia, churches, church yard, grave yard, grave, cemetery, stones, buildings, derelict, abandoned, ruin, ruins, redundant, old, 14th century,
Description
The remains of St.Mary's church, within the grounds of St. John the Baptist church yard in the village of Stiffkey on the North Norfolk Coast, UK. Believed to have been constructed on the 14th or 15th century.
All saints Anglo-Saxon church architecture building churches worship UK England Religion churchyard cemetery Buildings Horizontal public parish established Historic United kingdom
Description
All saints Anglo Saxon church Brixworth Northamptonshire UK built around AD680
All saints Anglo-Saxon church Architecture building spire worship churches UK England Religion churchyard cemetery Buildings Vertical public parish established Historic United kingdom
Description
All saints Anglo-Saxon church Brixworth Northamptonshire UK built around AD680
Offwell Church-St Mary the virgin; Grave Yard; Graves; Church; Religious; Yard; Offwell; Worship; Grieving; Burial; Head Stones; Flowers; Cross; antrowe; anthony rowe; anthony rowe
Commonwealth War Graves Memorial, War Grave, memorial, Stone, Plaque, Remembrance, River front, Merseyside, Liverpool, War dead, Maritime, Marine, Merchant Seamen, Sailors, North West England, UK, GB,
Slovakia Eger Budapest Hungary Graves Cemetery Church Old Ancient Tombstones Inscriptions 19th Century Flowers Heritage Funeral Horror Creepy Memory Family Vault Morbid Old Vintage Snow Grave Tombstone Inscription Seat Bench Condition White Eastern Europe Communist Socialist
longuenesse souvenir war grave cemetery northern france saint omer world one ww1 cwgc commonwealth graves commision graves graveyard soldiers british empire gravestones cross memorial maintained conflict great
Description
Longuenesse Souvenir War Grave Cemetery situated near Saint Omer, Northern France
wymondham abbey church grave graves graveyard churches tree trees fir green blue sky sun sunny summer religious religion pray vicar priest wedding funeral Christ Christening Christian lord jesus god JUMJIG
St John's Church, Cragg Vale, North Yorkshire, England; spire; brick wall; graves; graveyard; brown; trees; grave stones; winter; religion; religious; holy; house of god
Description
Cragg Vale is a peaceful Pennine village built in a valley, once the site of a Norman deer park, later in the Middle Ages the centre of a thriving iron smelting industry and centuries later, during the Industrial Revolution, home to around a dozen cotton mills. It runs off the Calder Valley from the village of Mytholmroyd, near Hebden Bridge, and climbs steadily up the hillside to the moors atop Blackstone Edge, where one of England's most dramatic Roman roads can still be seen, majestic amidst the heather. This tiny village consists of a long road up the hill and this tiny hamlet in the bottom of the valley. It became famous in the 18th Centuary when a group of men, lead by "King" David Hartley and with the assitance of local publicans, began to counterfeit coins. The publicans would take real coins, the 'coiners' as they became known would scrape gold from around the edges and pass them back to the publicans to put into circulation. The only difference was that they were a tiny bit smaller, but nobody would notice. They melted the scraped gold and reformed it to make new coins. When rumours of their counterfeiting reached the authorities they sent an Excise Officer, William Dighton, to investigate in 1769. They were caught only after "King David" put a ransom on the head of Dighton and two men set out to find him. He was shot in the head and killed. Hartley was hanged in York and his body buried in Heptonstall, on the other side of Hebden Bridge.
abandoned church of Ireland church and graveyard at Inver county donegal Ireland decay stone rust hopeless overgrown grass chain ivy collapse grave yard death