English Heritage sites near Abbess Beauchamp and Berners Roding Parish

Hill Hall

HILL HALL

9 miles from Abbess Beauchamp and Berners Roding Parish

This fine Elizabethan mansion features some of the earliest external Renaissance architectural detail in the country.

Prior's Hall Barn

PRIOR'S HALL BARN

14 miles from Abbess Beauchamp and Berners Roding Parish

One of the finest surviving medieval barns in eastern England, tree-ring dated to the mid-15th century, with a breathtaking aisled interior and crown post roof, the product of some 400 oaks.

Waltham Abbey Gatehouse and Bridge

WALTHAM ABBEY GATEHOUSE AND BRIDGE

14 miles from Abbess Beauchamp and Berners Roding Parish

A fine 14th century gatehouse, bridge and other remains of the abbey refounded by Harold, last Saxon King of England.

Audley End House and Gardens

AUDLEY END HOUSE AND GARDENS

18 miles from Abbess Beauchamp and Berners Roding Parish

One of England's finest country houses, Audley End is also a mansion with a difference. Enjoy a great day out.

Hadleigh Castle

HADLEIGH CASTLE

21 miles from Abbess Beauchamp and Berners Roding Parish

The romantic ruins of a royal castle overlooking the Essex marshes. Hadleigh was begun in about 1215 by Hubert de Burgh, but extensively refortified by Edward III during the Hundred Years War.

Tilbury Fort

TILBURY FORT

22 miles from Abbess Beauchamp and Berners Roding Parish

Spend a great family day out at Tilbury Fort in Essex. Explore the magazine houses or the bastion magazine passages of this fort on the Thames estuary that has protected London’s seaward approach.


Churches in Abbess Beauchamp and Berners Roding Parish

Abbess Roding: St Edmund

Abbess Roding Ongar
https://e-voice.org.uk/southrodingschurches/

St Edmund Abbess Roding is one of four Churches in the South Rodings Parish in the Deanery of Dunmow & Stansted and in the Diocese of Chelmsford. The Church is located in the north of the village and is situated in a small church yard, which is grassed and contains a number of trees. The church building is listed Grade II*.

It consists of a nave, chancel, north vestry, south porch and tower. The nave dates back to the fourteenth century and may have possibly been the rebuilding of an earlier nave, as there are indications that the Church is of twelfth century origin. The Church has a fine array of stained glass windows and three bells which are rung regularly. The Church is always kept open and is popular with visitors.

Despite having one of the largest nonconformist congregations in Essex in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries St Edmund's Church is now the only place of Worship in Abbess Roding. Two services are held in the Church during an average month. The Church enjoys a mixture of Common Worship and traditional Book of Common Prayer services but has a preference for the Prayer Book.

The Church plays a key role in the life of the village. The Friends of St Edmunds organise several events during the year to raise money for Church funds. Each Christmas for over forty years the Church has organized Carol singing around Abbess & Beauchamp Roding to raise money for the Children's Society.

Beauchamp Roding: St Botolph

Dunmow Road Beauchamp Roding Ongar
https://e-voice.org.uk/southrodingschurches/

St Botolph Beauchamp Roding (pronounced Beecham) is one of four Churches in the South Rodings Parish in the Deanery of Dunmow & Stansted and in the Diocese of Chelmsford. The Church is situated away from the centre of the village, standing in a church yard surrounded by fields and is approached via an entrance on the B184. The Church building which is listed Grade II*, looks out onto an idyllic location with a beautiful view. The Church is open daily and attracts a substantial number of visitors who are struck by the beauty of the surroundings and by the sense of peace and tranquillity they find there.
The church building consists of a nave, chancel, tower and south porch. The present nave dates from the fourteenth century, although this may have replaced an earlier structure dating from the eleventh century. The tower dates from the fifteenth century and contains the belfry; the bells are still in position although they are no longer capable of being rung. One unique feature of the Church is the staged benching at the rear of the nave.
Two services are held in the Church during an average month. The Church is committed to a mixture of Common Worship and traditional Book of Common Prayer services.
 


No churches found in Abbess Beauchamp and Berners Roding Parish