List of Historic Buildings of The United Kingdom - Anglo-Saxon, Celtic and Viking Buildings and Structures

Anglo-Saxon, Celtic and Viking Buildings and Structures

For more details on this topic, see Anglo-Saxon architecture, Insular art, and Norse art.

Approximately 5th century to the Norman Conquest of 1066.

A - L
  • Abernethy Round Tower, Perth and Kinross
  • All Saints' Church, Brixworth
  • All Saints' Church, Earls Barton
  • All Saints' Church Wing, Buckinghamshire
  • Anglian Tower, York
  • Athelney, Somerset
  • Barnack Church, Peterborough
  • Bewcastle Cross, Cumbria
  • Breamore Church, Hampshire
  • Brechin Round Tower, Angus
  • Breedon Priory Church, Breedon on the Hill, Leicestershire
  • Brigstock Church, Northamptonshire
  • Cadbury Castle hill fort, Somerset
  • Cheddar Palace, Saxon great hall, Somerset
  • Daw's Castle hill fort, Somerset
  • Deganwy Castle, North Wales
  • Devil's Dyke, Cambridgeshire, earthwork
  • Dùn Èistean, Lewis, Scotland
  • Escomb Church, County Durham
  • Glastonbury Abbey, Somerset
  • Gosforth cross, Cumbria
  • Eureka's Castle
  • Great Paxton Church, Cambridgeshire
  • Greensted Church, Essex
  • Hexham Abbey crypt, Northumberland
  • Holy Trinity Church Bosham, West Sussex
  • Iona Abbey, Iona, Scotland
  • Jórvík (Viking York)
  • King Doniert's Stone, Cornwall
  • Lindisfarne, or Holy Island, Northumberland
M - Z
  • Monkwearmouth-Jarrow Abbey, County Durham
  • Muchelney Abbey, Somerset
  • Nevern Church, Pembrokeshire
  • Odda's Chapel, Gloucestershire
  • Offa's Dyke, earthwork separating the former kingdoms of Mercia and Powys
  • Old Minster, Winchester, Hampshire
  • Presteigne Church, Powys
  • Puffin Island, Anglesey
  • Richard's Castle, Herefordshire
  • Ripon Cathedral crypt, North Yorkshire
  • Roman Ridge, earthwork in South Yorkshire
  • Ruthwell Cross, Dumfriesshire
  • St Augustine's Abbey, Kent
  • St Botolph's Church Hadstock, Essex
  • St Laurence's Church, Bradford-on-Avon, Wiltshire
  • St Martin's Church, Canterbury, Kent
  • St Mary de Castro, Dover, Kent
  • St Mary's Church Reculver, Kent
  • St Mary's Church Sompting, West Sussex
  • St Mary's Church Stow, Lincolnshire
  • St Mary Coslany Church Norwich, Norfolk
  • St Michael at the Northgate, Oxford
  • St Pancras Church Canterbury, Kent
  • St Peter-on-the-Wall, Essex
  • St Peter's Church, Barton-upon-Humber, Lincolnshire
  • St Peter's Church Heysham, Lancashire
  • St Wystan's Church the crypt, Repton, Derbyshire
  • Sutton Hoo burial complex, Suffolk
  • Taunton Castle, Somerset
  • Tintagel, Cornwall
  • Wansdyke (earthwork), south-west England
  • West Stow, Suffolk
  • Wittering Church, Cambridgeshire
  • St. Nicholas' Church, Worth, West Sussex
  • Yeavering, Northumberland

Read more about this topic:  List Of Historic Buildings Of The United Kingdom

Famous quotes containing the words celtic, viking, buildings and/or structures:

    Coming to Rome, much labour and little profit! The King whom you seek here, unless you bring Him with you you will not find Him.
    Anonymous 9th century, Irish. “Epigram,” no. 121, A Celtic Miscellany (1951, revised 1971)

    Rice and peas fit into that category of dishes where two ordinary foods, combined together, ignite a pleasure far beyond the capacity of either of its parts alone. Like rhubarb and strawberries, apple pie and cheese, roast pork and sage, the two tastes and textures meld together into the sort of subtle transcendental oneness that we once fantasized would be our experience when we finally found the ideal mate.
    John Thorne, U.S. cookbook writer. Simple Cooking, “Rice and Peas: A Preface with Recipes,” Viking Penguin (1987)

    The American who has been confined, in his own country, to the sight of buildings designed after foreign models, is surprised on entering York Minster or St. Peter’s at Rome, by the feeling that these structures are imitations also,—faint copies of an invisible archetype.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)

    It is clear that all verbal structures with meaning are verbal imitations of that elusive psychological and physiological process known as thought, a process stumbling through emotional entanglements, sudden irrational convictions, involuntary gleams of insight, rationalized prejudices, and blocks of panic and inertia, finally to reach a completely incommunicable intuition.
    Northrop Frye (b. 1912)