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Ecclesiastical Buildings.

 

Aylsham St. Michael.
Part of the interior is late 13th century. It has a fine screen with 16 painted figures from the early 16th century and some 15th century brasses.


Babingley St. Felix.
14th century, now in ruins, on the site where St. Felix built the first church in Norfolk. The present church, near the main road, thatched and made of corrugated iron, was built in 1894 by the then Prince of Wales.


Bacton Broomholm Priory.
These are interesting ruins. Broomholm was supposed in the 13th century to have a relic of the Cross and was visited by Henry III. Do you remember Chaucer’s Reeve’s oath, “By the Holy Cross of Bromholm”? Unfortunately part of the ruins became a gun emplacement in World War II.

Bawsey St. James.
Bawsey St. James stands in the middle of a field on a low hill. The central tower is Norman. It was a ruin prior to 1770. Fairly recently Channel 4’s Time Team staged a three day investigation and dig around the church.


Beeston Regis Priory.
The ruins of an Augustinian priory, founded in 1216. Ruins of the cloister, chapter house and nave are visible.


Binham Priory.
A Benedictine priory, was founded by the nephew of William the Conqueror (Peter de Valoines) in 1091. Only the church nave and the gatehouse survive today, although some foundations of the domestic buildings can be seen.

The west front of the church is pre-1244 and important historically and architecturally. There is a Norman clerestory and wall passage a Seven Sacrament font and a Tobrok Cross made from shell cases, commemorating the dead in North Africa in World War II.

Blakeney St. Nicholas.
Blakeney St. Nicholas has a slender second tower at the north-east end, and not as tall as the main tower. It was used as a beacon for ships and it still shows a light at night.


Booton St. Michael and All Angels.
Originally medieval, now of knapped flint. It has a hammerbeam roof and a 14th century figure in the porch.


Burnham Deepdale St. Mary
Burnham Deepdale St. Mary has an Anglo-Saxon round tower. The font is exceptionally unusual and very fine. It shows the Labours of the Months in the arcading and above the Trees of Life and, at the top, are animals and plants.

More...


Burnham Thorpe All Saints’.
A 13th century church. The cross and lectern are made from HMS Victory’s timbers. Flags from the Victory hang in the nave. There is a brass to Sir William Calthorpe 1420.

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