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All Saints' Church is the ancient parish church of Fulham, in the County of Middlesex, pre-dating the Reformation. The parish was founded in the precinct of Fulham Manor, currently adjacent to it, which was in the possession of the Bishops of London, since the 8th century. Hence it began as the parish church of the bishops of London and several ...
The cathedral from Irongate Interior of the nave Alabaster memorial to John Lawe, inscribed in Latin: "Under this lies John Lawe, once a Canon of the Collegiate Church of All Saints, Derby, and Sub-Deacon of the same, who died in the year of Our Lord 1400. cuius animae propicietur deus amen" Tomb effigy of Bess of Hardwick (Elizabeth, Countess of Shrewsbury) Derby Cathedral SE window.
All Saints, North Street. All Saints was founded in the eleventh century, but most of the present building is fourteenth and fifteenth century. The land on which the church was erected was reputedly donated by Ralph de Paganel, a Norman tenant-in-chief whose name is commemorated in the Yorkshire village of Hooton Pagnell. [2]
All Saints in the Jewry in 1841 opposite Trinity's chapel (far left) and St John's College gatehouse. A mediæval church stood in St John's Street, Cambridge.This was known as All Saints in the Jewry, [2] and previously as All Saints by the Hospital (due to its proximity to the Hospital of St John the Evangelist). [3]
All Saints' Church is a Roman Catholic parish church situated between Dumplington and Barton upon Irwell, near Urmston, in Trafford, Greater Manchester, England. The church was constructed between 1867 and 1868 and was designed by E. W. Pugin in the Gothic Revival style for Sir Humphrey de Trafford .
Between 1865 and 1868, the Church of England St Catherine's Church was built at their expense to the rear of All Saints' Church. It was demolished in the late 1970s. The graveyard remains and is the last resting place of Marshall Stevens. [10] Barton upon Irwell Methodist Chapel, built in 1796, was a short distance from the bridge.
The Minster Church of All Saints or Rotherham Minster is the Anglican minster church of Rotherham, South Yorkshire, England.The Minster is a prominent example of Perpendicular Gothic architecture and various architectural historians have rated it highly.
All Saints is known as the "St. Patrick's of Harlem" [3] because of its size and design, the Gothic Revival, or alternatively Venetian Gothic, brick church with terracotta trimming was dedicated in 1893. [1] The design is festooned with rose windows in the clerestory and a prominent bell tower.