Saxon Cross Shaft, Eyam, Derbyshire. Photographed by William Blake.
Stereoscope slide of a Saxon Cross Shaft at Eyam Church, Derbyshire.
Saxon Cross, St. Edward's churchyard, Leek
The original church was built in the eleventh century, but the Roman numerals on the cross (1180) date it to almost a century later. It is a long, round, cross-shaft, with a horizontal band of interlace ...
Saxon Cross-Shaft, Alstonefield. Photographed by William Blake.
Stereoscope image of an anglo-saxon cross-shaft found at Alstonefield Church, Staffordshire
Spital Chapel of St James, Tamworth
Spital Chapel is a Grade II* listed building accessed by gated footpaths from Wigginton and Ashby Roads.
It is believed that it was a Chantry Chapel built by Philip Marmion in the 13th century and ...
St. Mary's Grove, Stafford
A view looking south-west across St. Mary’su Grove from the west end of St. Mary's Church. In the foreground are the foundations of the Anglo-Saxon chapel of St. Bertelin which had been excavated in ...
The Will of Wulfric Spot, Staffordshire
The Will of Wulfric Spot pre-dates Domesday Book (written in 1086) by some 80 years, the will is a crucial source for the study of place-names both in Staffordshire and surrounding counties, and so is ...
Wolverhampton - Anglo-Saxon cross shaft in St. Peter's Church-yard: sepia drawing
'Pillar at Wolverhampton.' [?East] view of an Anglo-Saxon cross shaft standing on a pile of rubble. The cap is cracked, and the pillar has five bands of decoration. It probably dates from the mid 9th ...