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Christchurch Castle was built in the late 11thC to protect the town's and river access to the interior of Wessex.
Grade I Listed 1830-1835 picturesque and romantic seaside mansion. Now fully repaired to exterior only. Six staterooms open as visitor and exhibition centre.
Longest parish church in England, dates from 1094. West Tower can be climbed. Legendary `Miraculous Beam'. Memorial to the poet Shelley.
A carefully restored anglo-Saxon watermill only a few minutes' walk from the town centre. The working machinery forms a fascinating backdrop to a collection of milling artefacts and gift shop.
The remains of Christchurch Castle include parts of the mound-top keep, and more unusually the 12th-century riverside chamber block or ‘Constable’s House’. This very early example of domestic architecture includes a rare Norman chimney.