Explore Religious Heritage Across Europe

Here you can search for a building to visit. You can use the map find destinations, or you can use the filters to search for a building based upon what different criteria.

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St Mary's Church, Stody

St Mary's Church, Stody

Stody, GB

St Marys church is located in Stody, a Norfolk village about 4 miles southwest of Holt.

St Mary's Church, Surlingham

St Mary's Church, Surlingham

Surlingham, GB

St Mary's church is located in Surlingham, a Norfolk village close to the River Yare and about 5 miles east of the City of Norwich.

St Mary's Church, Syderstone

St Mary's Church, Syderstone

Syderstone, GB

St Mary's church is located in Syderstone, a Norfolk village north of the B1454 and about 7 miles north-west of Fakenham.

St Mary's Church, Tasburgh

St Mary's Church, Tasburgh

Tasburgh, GB

St Mary's church is located in Tasburgh, a Norfolk village just to the west of the A140 Norwich to Ipswich road and about 10 miles south of the City of Norwich.

St Mary's Church, Titchwell

St Mary's Church, Titchwell

Titchwell, GB

St Mary's church is located in Titchwell, a Norfolk village right on the A149 North Norfolk Coast road, and close to Brancaster Beach.

St Mary's Church, Wortham

St Mary's Church, Wortham

Wortham, GB

St Mary's church is located in Wortham, a village in Suffolk about 3 miles south-west of Diss.

St Mary's Pro-Cathedral

St Mary's Pro-Cathedral

Dublin, IE

St Mary's Pro-Cathedral was built in 1825 and is the first Catholic episcopal see established anywhere in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland since the Protestant Reformation. Dublin's two cathedrals, Saint Patrick's Cathedral and Church of Christ Cathedral, are part of the Protestant Church of Ireland. As early as 1803, a committee was formed to build a Catholic pro-cathedral. George Papworth (1781-1855) was appointed architect of the pro-cathedral. Construction work began in June 1814, and the completion in 1825 was celebrated as a sign of Irish nationalism.

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