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St Pauls Church, Bristol: 1790s Portland Square, St Pauls: I "Railings and gates of the Church of St Paul". historicengland.org.uk: St Peter's Church, Castle Park: 12th century Castle Park A Saxon foundation, bombed in 1940. Ruined. Maintained as a monument to the civilian war dead of Bristol. "Church of St Peter".
The Mount Without, formerly the Church of St Michael on the Mount Without, is a former church, now a creative space, on St Michael's Hill in Bristol, England, near the University. It has been designated as a grade II* listed building , [ 1 ] and was described as being in poor condition and on the Buildings at Risk Register as recently as 2021.
St Nicholas is a church in St Nicholas Street, Bristol, England.The church was bombed in the Second World War and rebuilt in 1974–1975 as a church museum. This museum closed in 2007 and the building was used by the city council as offices; in 2018 the church came back into use as an Anglican place of worship in the Diocese of Bristol.
Monochrome illustration of St James' church and Priory ruins, published in 1630. The image shows the church from the south east aspect in the background on the left, with the Priory ruins in the foreground in the centre and on the right. Amongst the ruins can be seen men and women in seventeenth century costume.
The Church of St John the Baptist in Bristol, also known as St John on the Wall, is a historic church in the care of heritage charity the Churches Conservation Trust.The upper church and its medieval vaulted crypt is located at the lower end of Broad Street and is built into the old city's medieval walls.
Bristol Cathedral, formally the Cathedral Church of the Holy and Undivided Trinity, is a Church of England cathedral in the city of Bristol, England. It is the seat of the Bishop of Bristol . The cathedral was originally an abbey dedicated to St Augustine, founded in 1140 and consecrated in 1148. [ 2 ]
Horfield United Reformed Church, Bristol; S. St James' Priory, Bristol; St Peter and St Paul, Bristol
From 1240 to 1892 the Bristol Harbour was on the opposite side of the church when it was filled in. It was built, on the site of an 11th-century church, in the 14th century and rebuilt around 1470. The tower and east window were paid for by John Shipward, four times Mayor of Bristol, who died in 1473, [ 2 ] the tower being built by the mason ...