Discover this fascinating church where villagers have left their mark in the deeply rural Saints area of Suffolk
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Orange area churches
The long sweep of seashore and the magical light, the remote Saints villages with their ancient churches down tiny lanes, and lazy river trips on the Broads greet the visitor to this north east corner of Suffolk stretching up to the Waveney Valley, one of the loveliest in the country.
Darsham All Saints
This is a church with ancient beginnings where the outline of a Norman building can be seen and its history may well go back over 1000 years.
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Dunwich St James
This church is known for its beautiful setting with long views over the marshes and the remarkable remains of a medieval leper chapel in the graveyard
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Beccles St Michael
The colossal 16th Century bell tower will guide you to this beautiful town centre church with its gorgeous porch leading into a church that is quite breathtaking in scale.
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Southwold St Edmund
This majestic 15th century Suffolk church is close to the sea and a real showpiece of traditional East Anglian flint work. The sumptuous two-storied porch is one of the best in Suffolk.
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Westleton St Peter IP17 3AF
This lofty and airy church on Saxon foundations with ruined tower has been compared to a thatched tithe barn. It is set in a wildlife churchyard close to the coastal heath.
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Walberswick St Andrew IP18 6UZ
The magnificent knapped flint tower of this church rises from the enigmatic ruins of a much larger church. All that remains of the once grand 15th century church are the ruins of nave, chancel and south aisle, and of course the tower although that was built for an even earlier church on the site. But what ruins!
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Blythburgh Holy Trinity
Standing aloft from the wild marshes of the Blyth estuary, this huge and awe-inspiring church, resplendent with medieval stonework, is known as ‘cathedral of the marshes’
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