English Heritage sites near Bugthorpe Parish

Kirkham Priory

KIRKHAM PRIORY

5 miles from Bugthorpe Parish

Beautifully placed between the city of York and the town of Malton, the riverside ruins of Kirkham Priory are set in the beautiful Derwent valley near the Yorkshire Wolds.

Wharram Percy Deserted Medieval Village

WHARRAM PERCY DESERTED MEDIEVAL VILLAGE

7 miles from Bugthorpe Parish

The most famous and intensively studied of Britain's 3,000 or so deserted medieval villages, Wharram Percy occupies a remote but attractive site in a beautiful Wolds valley.

Clifford's Tower, York

CLIFFORD'S TOWER, YORK

11 miles from Bugthorpe Parish

Experience stunning views over the ancient city of York and immerse yourself in centuries of history at one of York’s most iconic sites. 

York Cold War Bunker

YORK COLD WAR BUNKER

13 miles from Bugthorpe Parish

The most modern and spine chilling of English Heritage’s properties the York Cold War Bunker uncovers the secret history of Britain’s Cold War.

Pickering Castle

PICKERING CASTLE

17 miles from Bugthorpe Parish

This splendid 13th century castle was used as a royal hunting lodge, holiday home and stud farm by a succession of medieval kings.

Howden Minster

HOWDEN MINSTER

18 miles from Bugthorpe Parish

The elaborately decorated ruins of a 14th-century chancel and chapter house (viewable only from the outside), attached to the still operational cathedral-like minster church.


Churches in Bugthorpe Parish

St Andrew

Main Street Bugthorpe
(01759) 369974
http://www.garrowbychurches.com/

12c with 13c and14c additions. Restored 19c and redecorated by Goodhart-Rendell. Chancel arch very fine carving.

St. Andrew's church is a Grade 1 listed building with a long tradition of Christian witness and ministry. The original nave was pulled down and re-built in 1859, but much remains of the original Norman building. The three stone sedilia on the south side of the chancel give weight to the belief that a small colony of monks once lived in cells on the north of the church and served within it. The Early English chancel arch retains earlier capitals and the present choir would have been the original chancel in the Norman church. The gilt and oak High Altar was installed in 1927 and the central stone altar, with its tester above, was commissioned in 1937 by the 1st Earl of Halifax in memory of his father, the 2nd Viscount. The church has undergone considerable restoration in the twenty first century with extensive stone repairs, work on the nave roof, re-plastering and decoration.

The Holy Sacrament has always been central to our worship and traditionally Bugthorpe has celebrated Sung Eucharist to the setting by Merbecke. The Order of Service draws heavily upon the Book of Common Prayer.


No churches found in Bugthorpe Parish