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Explore the castle's changing fortunes. From formidable fortress to battle-scarred ruins. With other additions including a mansion house.
Experience the stillness and beauty of this impressive monastic site - one of the most powerful abbeys in Europe.
An 18thC mansion, recently restored. Family home of the Lord and Lady Feversham. Unique 18thC landscaped garden with terraces, temples, fine views and walks, 400-acre parkland.
An 18thC grass-covered terrace, landscaped from wooded hillside with views of Rievaulx Abbey, 2 classical temples, 1 furnished and decorated as a dining-room.
Prominently situated in this attractive village in the Howardian Hills, the oldest parts of the nave date from the 11th century while the nave arches are late Norman, and the aisles date from the 14th century. The tower was added at the end
Originally a wooden Saxon building, a church at Ampleforth, or Ambrford, is mentioned in the Domesday Survey of 1086. Rebuilt in the 13th century and altered in 1866 and 1994, now only the nave, the tower arch and the north and south doorwa
A wonderful church hidden deep in the North York Moors, this area was once populated by over 200 people, now only a handful remain. With its painted wagon roof and lavish decoration by Temple Moore, St Mary's has delighted and inspired both
A pleasant church built as a daughter church to St Gregory's Minster, Kirkdale, in 1882, it was designed by C. Hodgson Fowler of Durham. Today it is a joint Anglican-Methodist church and contains good glass by Kempe, Duncombe memorials and
An attractive essay in Victorian Gothic, this church, dating from 1870, was designed by Sir George Gilbert Scott with furnishings and decorations by Temple Moore. Outside it features an unusual bellcote with four openings, while inside, an
An Anglo-Saxon building with early Norman additions, All Saints was under the patronage of Byland Abbey during the Middle Ages. Noted for its Anglo-Saxon sundial and its Norman carvings of winged horses and horned men, it has survived pilla