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The church dates from the early 13th century, with 14th century transepts and 15th century clerestories and crossing tower. Excavations in 1954 revealed the adjacent late Anglo-Saxon church of St Bertelin. [2] The church was collegiate when recorded in the Domesday Book when there were 13 Prebendary Canons. [3]
The church consists of a nave, north and south transepts, a chancel, a vestry, and a west tower. The tower has diagonal buttresses, a south doorway, and a top cornice and a parapet. The windows are round-headed with keystones, and the south doorway has a rusticated surround. Inside the church is a Norman chancel arch. [2] [3] II* St Mary ...
This page is a list of these buildings in the county of Staffordshire, by district. City of Stoke-on-Trent ... Church of St Mary: Rolleston on Dove: Parish Church ...
The castle has a visitor centre with audio-visual displays and hands-on items. There is also a recreated medieval herb garden. Shakespeare productions take place in the castle grounds each summer. The castle forms a landmark for drivers, as it is visible from the M6 motorway. St Chad's Church, Stafford
St Mary's Roman Catholic church. St. John the Evangelist, Bishops Wood. St Paul's church, Coven. Coven Methodist church, formerly a Wesleyan chapel, the oldest surviving nonconformist church in the area. The 1868 Wesleyan chapel at Brewood, still a Methodist church. St Mary and St Chad's Church, Brewood, is Brewood's local parish church.
Church of St Mary Castle Church, Stafford: Church: 15th century: 16 January 1951 ... Staffordshire County Staff Club Stafford: House: Mid 18th century: 16 January 1951
St Mary Swynnerton: St Mary's dates from the 12th century, with the chancel rebuilt and the aisles added the following century. In the 14th century a south chapel was added, and the tower was built on the west end of the church.
He married Mary Stanley (d.1609), a daughter of Edward Stanley, 3rd Earl of Derby, by his wife Katherine Howard, a daughter of the 3rd Duke of Norfolk. He died in 1603 and was buried at St Mary's Church, Stafford. His wife survived him and was buried in 1609 at Thornbury, where survives her monument. [18]