Thornton le Dale HFF
Mallard
Thatched roof
Almshouses in Thornton le Dale
HFF!
Pigeon
Woodland
Woodland view
Steps
Scammonden Reservoir
Very noisy here!
Foxgloves
Scammonden Water
A fish!
A bunny and a dog!
The view
A worker
Coniston Water
Clouds
Hands
Rustic Fence
Inquisitive sheep
Interesting Aeroplane
Parish Church of Pickering
Wall painting from the 15th Century
More wall paintings
Ancient font
Pendle Hill bright sunny morning and HFF!
Pendle Hill
Pendle Hill late afternoon
Crocus in bloom
Ripon Cathederal
Magnificent Organ
Organ from the front
The pulpit
A view from Knaresborough Castle
Viaduct over the River Nidd
HFF or rope Friday
Fountains Abbey
Formal lake
Reflections
Sunshine on Yorkshire
2019, a beautiful finish to the year
Threshfield Quarry
From the bridge at Linton
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St Peter and St Paul's Church, Pickering


The Church of St Peter and St Paul, Pickering is the parish church of the market town of Pickering in the county of North Yorkshire. The church sits on the top of a small hill in the centre of the town and its spire is visible across the Ryedale district.
The Church you see today was built on the site of an earlier, Saxon building. Little is known about this early Church, and all that remains is a carved cross shaft and the bowl of the stone font. The Saxon Church on this site may well have been wasted during William the Conqueror’s ‘harrying of the North’.
The medieval wall paintings, which give our church its fame, were probably first commissioned in 1450, and were painted the following decade, as details in the costumes and armour of some of the figures makes clear. Nikolaus Pevsner, the renowned expert on architectural history said that ‘This is one of the most complete set of wall paintings… and they give one a vivid idea of what ecclesiastical interiors were really like’. They are in fact one of about five sets of such extensive wall paintings still in existence in the country. The images vary in scale and in what they depict: some are large single figures; others tell stories.
The Church you see today was built on the site of an earlier, Saxon building. Little is known about this early Church, and all that remains is a carved cross shaft and the bowl of the stone font. The Saxon Church on this site may well have been wasted during William the Conqueror’s ‘harrying of the North’.
The medieval wall paintings, which give our church its fame, were probably first commissioned in 1450, and were painted the following decade, as details in the costumes and armour of some of the figures makes clear. Nikolaus Pevsner, the renowned expert on architectural history said that ‘This is one of the most complete set of wall paintings… and they give one a vivid idea of what ecclesiastical interiors were really like’. They are in fact one of about five sets of such extensive wall paintings still in existence in the country. The images vary in scale and in what they depict: some are large single figures; others tell stories.
Nouchetdu38, Fred Fouarge, Rosalyn Hilborne, volker_hmbg and 3 other people have particularly liked this photo
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Thank you for the interesting info.
natureoncam aka Greg club has replied to volker_hmbg clubThe hill on which it stands is a great aid to the perspective obtained!
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