St Peter and St Paul
Upton, Nottinghamshire
Said by many to be the best kept secret among the forty two English cathedrals, it is a gem dating from 1108.
Southwell, Nottinghamshire
In 956AD King Eadwig of Wessex grants Oskytel, Archbishop of York, lands in Nottinghamshire (possibly the estate of the former Roman villa) and over the next century or so a Collegiate church with a Chapter of canons following a distinct set of rules began to form.
The Archbishop of York authorised the rebuilding of the Anglo Saxon church and the building we know today was started. Very little of the early rebuild remains (on account of later construction) but by the 1120s work had reached the arches below the central tower, which still survive. Simon Jenkins notes 'it retains its three Norman towers, two of them with the conical spires once common to Norman churches'.
Around 1300AD the Minster's Chapter House, renowned for its extraordinary carved stone leaves and green men, is finished. It is today widely considered one of the most beautiful buildings in England and the great architectural historian, Sir Nikolaus Pevsner, devoted a complete book to its glories. The pulpitum (1340) is also notable.
The Minster came through the Reformation's turbulent period relatively unscathed but in the Civil War the building was damaged and may have been used as stables by Roundhead forces (King Charles I spent a final night of freedom at a local Inn).
In 1851 the celebrated Victorian architect, Ewan Christian, begins a sympathetic restoration of the building. Two modern works of art, Christ in Majesty by Peter Eugene Ball (1987) and a west end window by John Piper's long term collaborator Patrick Reyntiens (1996) enhance the interior.
Upton, Nottinghamshire
Bleasby, Nottinghamshire
The church has an idyllic setting within a quintessential English country churchyard.
Bleasby, Nottinghamshire
The church has an idyllic setting within a quintessential English country churchyard.