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Effigy commonly supposed to represent Henry de Raleigh (d.1301), the westernmost of an adjacent pair of so-called "crusader" effigies, north wall of south choir aisle/ambulatory, Exeter Cathedral [1] Chequy or and gules, a chief vair, the arms of Raleigh of Raleigh Pilton, later adopted by Chichester
Exeter Cathedral, properly known as the Cathedral Church of Saint Peter in Exeter, is an Anglican cathedral, and the seat of the Bishop of Exeter, in the city of Exeter, Devon, in South West England. The present building was complete by about 1400 and has several notable features, including an early set of misericords , an astronomical clock ...
This painting depicts Exeter's High Street. St Lawrence Church is in the background. St Lawrence Church, which predated the thirteenth-century, was destroyed on 4 May 1942. On the night of 3/4 May the Luftwaffe returned to Exeter, causing heavy damage to the city centre, considerable damage to the south side of the Cathedral and 164
The West Window of Exeter Cathedral also depicts him amongst the great figures of the cathedral's history shown there. A bust of Frederick Temple designed by Sir George Frampton is located outside the Big School Room at Sherborne School , where he served as governor from 1871 to 1902. [ 9 ]
Services also held in the local school Pinhoe United Reformed Church Pinhoe [31] URC: Maranatha Church Exeter Pinhoe [32] Partners in Harvest [33] St Luke, Countess Wear Priory Luke: 1837 Church of England: Topsham & Wear [34] Wonford Methodist Church Priory [35] Methodist: Exeter, Coast & Country Circ [6] St Peter's Cathedral, Exeter: St David ...
No. 2 Cathedral Close; No. 3 Cathedral Close; No. 4 Cathedral Close; No. 6 Cathedral close; The Devon and Exeter Institution (Cathedral Close) The Devon County War Memorial and Processional Way; Notaries House (Cathedral Close) No. 15-15a Cathedral Close; No. 67 South Street; Wynard's Hospital (Magdalan Street) Dean Clarke House (Former RD&E ...
Exeter was little affected during the Blitz, the German night-bombing offensive against Britain's cities, though nearby Plymouth was severely damaged in early 1941. This changed in 1942 when Exeter became the first target of the so-called " Baedeker Blitz ", a campaign to attack targets of cultural and historical, rather than military or ...
Granada Cathedral: 34.5 m (113 ft) [23] Granada: Spain: 37 Basilica of Saint-Quentin: 34 m (112 ft) Saint-Quentin: France: 37 Cathedral of Our Lady of Guadalupe: 34 m (112 ft) [24] Zamora de Hidalgo: Mexico: Tallest Neo-Gothic church in Mexico, 106 m. Still under construction. Known as the "Incomplete Cathedral" ("La Catedral Inconclusa"). 37 ...