Wrotham #2
Large window
The Nave
Ancient timber roof
Well worn entrance.
Originally built somewhere between the late Anglo-Saxon period to the early Norman era (pre AD1066), St George’s Church in Wrotham is recorded in the Domesday book (1068), and was probably built on the foundations of an even earlier structure.As an important church belonging to the Archbishop of Canterbury on the main road from London to the ports, it was almost completely rebuilt in the 13th Century, and there are only a few places in which parts of the original 11th Century structure remain.Among its distinguishing features are its large number of brasses, its clock (one of the oldest working ones in the country) and an unusual archway underneath the bell tower.
Large window
The Nave
Ancient timber roof
Well worn entrance.
Originally built somewhere between the late Anglo-Saxon period to the early Norman era (pre AD1066), St George’s Church in Wrotham is recorded in the Domesday book (1068), and was probably built on the foundations of an even earlier structure.As an important church belonging to the Archbishop of Canterbury on the main road from London to the ports, it was almost completely rebuilt in the 13th Century, and there are only a few places in which parts of the original 11th Century structure remain.Among its distinguishing features are its large number of brasses, its clock (one of the oldest working ones in the country) and an unusual archway underneath the bell tower.
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