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St Peter And Paul Church

by skyadmin October 22, 2021 in Photo Blog0 commentstags: church, england, kent
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St Peter and St Paul church is a largely medieval church in the village of Shoreham in Kent, with an outstanding late medieval timber-framed porch and very lively polychromatic C18 tower. The interior includes a late medieval rood screen, late medieval roofs and good quality fittings re-used from Westminster Abbey. This place is fairly hidden, you can see it from the road but I had to squeeze into a corner to get it at this angle.

Otford Palace

by skyadmin October 1, 2021 in Photo Blog0 commentstags: england, heritage, kent
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Otford Palace, also known as the Archbishop’s Palace, is in Otford, an English village and civil parish in the Sevenoaks District of Kent. The village is located on the River Darent, flowing north down its valley from its source on the North Downs. The King of Mercia, Offa, fought the Kentish Saxons in 776 at the Battle of Otford. From those times until 1537, the palace was one of the chain of houses belonging to the archbishops of Canterbury. It was rebuilt around 1515 by Archbishop Warham to rival that of Cardinal Wolsey at Hampton Court. Henry VIII forced Archbishop Thomas Cranmer to surrender the palace in 1537. When Henry died the palace fell into ruin. The principal surviving remains are the North-West Tower, the lower gallery, now converted to cottages, and a part of the Great Gatehouse. There are further remains on private land, and a section of the boundary wall can be seen in Bubblestone Road. The entire site, of about 4 acres (1.6 ha) is designated as an ancient monument. There are many related buildings in the village, including a wall in St Bartholomew’s Church dating from c. 1050. I shot this between rain clouds, the palace is actually bigger but is hidden at this angle.

The Grain Tower Battery

by skyadmin September 10, 2021 in Photo Blog0 commentstags: coast, england, heritage, kent
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Grain Tower Battery is a mid-19th-century gun tower situated offshore just east of Grain, Kent, standing in the mouth of the River Medway. It was built along the same lines as the Martello towers that were constructed along the British and Irish coastlines in the early 19th century and is the last-built example of a gun tower of this type. It owed its existence to the need to protect the important dockyards at Sheerness and Chatham from a perceived French naval threat during a period of tension in the 1850s. I shot this at low tide, whilst working on a feature film, the Grain Tower was one of the locations.
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