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The Church of St Mary the Virgin, widely known as St Mary Redcliffe, is the main Church of England parish church for the Redcliffe district of the city of Bristol, England. [1] The first reference to a church on the site appears in 1158, [ 2 ] with the present building dating from 1185 to 1872.
St Mary Redcliffe and Temple School is the only Church of England secondary school in the Diocese of Bristol. [27] It is a comprehensive state school and therefore does not select on academic merit. It is unusual, however, in that entry is not restricted by catchment area ; the school serves both the city and the outlying communities of Greater ...
The Thomas Hardye School, Dorchester, Dorset (1569) (formerly Dorchester Free School) Bury Grammar School (1570) Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School, Horncastle (1571) St Olave's Grammar School (1571) St Mary Redcliffe School (1571) (merged with Temple Colston School for girls (1709) and is now St Mary Redcliffe and Temple School) Burford School ...
St Mary Redcliffe Pipe Walk is an annual tradition which sees participants follow the route of a conduit that runs from a water source in the Knowle area of Bristol to the church of St Mary Redcliffe, a distance of approximately 2 miles. New participants on the walk are traditionally 'bumped' on marker stones that record the route of the pipe.
Temple Fee and Redcliffe Fee were distinct parishes, physically separated by a "Law Ditch". [4] Both were absorbed into Bristol by the city charter of 1373, ending a dispute between Bristol and Somerset over jurisdiction. [5] Temple parish merged into St Mary Redcliffe parish in 1956. [6]
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