English Heritage sites near Bylaugh Parish

North Elmham Chapel

NORTH ELMHAM CHAPEL

4 miles from Bylaugh Parish

A place with an unusual story, told by graphic panels. The small Norman chapel here stood on the site of an earlier timber church, probably the Saxon cathedral of East Anglia.

Baconsthorpe Castle

BACONSTHORPE CASTLE

13 miles from Bylaugh Parish

Visit the extensive ruins of Baconsthorpe Castle, a moated and fortified 15th century manor house, that are a testament to the rise and fall of a prominent Norfolk family, the Heydons.

Binham Market Cross

BINHAM MARKET CROSS

14 miles from Bylaugh Parish

The tall shaft of a 15th century cross, on the site of an annual fair held from the 1100s until the 1950s.

Castle Acre Castle and Bailey Gate

CASTLE ACRE CASTLE AND BAILEY GATE

14 miles from Bylaugh Parish

The delightful village of Castle Acre boasts an extraordinary wealth of history and is a very rare and complete survival of a Norman planned settlement.

Binham Priory

BINHAM PRIORY

14 miles from Bylaugh Parish

Among the most complete and impressive monastic ruins in Norfolk of a Benedictine priory with a well-documented history.

Castle Acre: Castle Acre Priory

CASTLE ACRE: CASTLE ACRE PRIORY

14 miles from Bylaugh Parish

This important Norfolk visitor attraction is one of the largest and best preserved monastic sites in England dating back to 1090.


Churches in Bylaugh Parish

Bylaugh: St Mary

Bylaugh Norwich
01603 871263
https://www.reepham-and-wensum-valley-team-churches.org.uk/

Grade I listed.

Owes its present appearance to a Norfolk squire, Sir John Lombe, who rebuilt this little church between 1809 and 1810.

The northern side of the church faces you at the end of an avenue of ancient yews. It is an aisle-less church - with very shallow transepts, whose gables rise as high as the ridge of the main roof - built against a Norman, perhaps part Saxon, round tower with a 14C octagonal top.
Rows of tall box pews on either side, becoming larger as they go, stretch towards the transepts, where under a domed ceiling of plaster are the family pews, presided over by a fine three-tier pulpit, and warmed by fireplaces in the transept walls. A board behind the altar carries The Lord's Prayer, the Creed and Commandments. In the chancel is a splendid brass of Sir John Curson (who died in 1471) and his wife.
A faculty obtained in 1809 gave details of a vault 21ft long, 7ft wide and 6ft deep, occupying the whole of the north transept - a burial place for Sir John Lombe, Bart. of Great Melton, and his heirs.
Every admirer of church architecture should see this little one at Bylaugh - a perfect specimen of the early 19C - which, fortunately, has escaped attention of Victorian restorers.
 


No churches found in Bylaugh Parish