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St Etheldreda's Church, Hatfield is 13th century and was originally Anglo-Saxon. It was named for St Etheldreda because it was adjacent to a palace of the Bishops of Ely who held her as their patron saint. St Etheldreda's is a Roman Catholic parish church in Ely, Cambridgeshire. It is part of the Diocese of East Anglia within the Province of ...
St Etheldreda's Church is a Catholic church in Ely Place, off Charterhouse Street in Holborn, London. The building is one of only two surviving in London from the reign of Edward I, and dates from between 1250 and 1290. It is dedicated to Æthelthryth, or Etheldreda, the Anglo-Saxon saint who founded the monastery at Ely in 673.
Accessed May 2016; Church history at the church's website. Accessed May 2016, Archive December 2019. St Etheldreda Hatfield Parish Church From Topographical Dictionary of England, 1831. Accessed May 2016; St. EtheldredaHatfield Churches by Peter Massingham (2009) Accessed May 2016 Archived 9 June 2016 at the Wayback Machine
Saint/St/St. Etheldreda's Church or the Church of Saint/St/St. Etheldreda may refer to any church dedicated to Æthelthryth or Etheldreda. These churches include: England
St Etheldreda's Church is a Roman Catholic parish church in Ely, Cambridgeshire, England.It is part of the Diocese of East Anglia within the Province of Westminster.. The church notably contains the national shrine and relics of St Etheldreda, an Anglo-Saxon queen and abbess who died on 23 June AD 679 and went on to become one of the most popular of the medieval saints in England. [1]
Church of St Etheldreda in 2022. The Church of St Etheldreda was built on the site of an earlier church, which had a chancel dating to the 13th and 14th centuries, and a nave and tower of the 15th century. [3] By the middle of the 19th century, the church had become dilapidated and was considered too small to adequately serve the local ...
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During repairs to the tower in the 1930s, a spirelet with a diadem of St Etheldreda was removed from the top of the stair turret and the pinnacles were removed from the centre of each balustrade; funds were insufficient for these details to be replaced. [1] The church was Grade II listed on 21 June 1995. [4]