English Heritage sites near Knightwick Parish
LEIGH COURT BARN
4 miles from Knightwick Parish
An outstanding display of English medieval carpentry, this mighty timber-framed barn is the largest cruck structure in Britain.
EDVIN LOACH OLD CHURCH
4 miles from Knightwick Parish
The ruins of an 11th century and later church built within the earthworks of a Norman motte and bailey castle, with a Victorian church nearby. The site of hundreds of years of worship.
WITLEY COURT AND GARDENS
7 miles from Knightwick Parish
A hundred years ago, Witley Court was one of England's great country houses, hosting many extravagant parties. Today it is a spectacular ruin, the result of a disastrous fire in 1937.
ST MARY'S CHURCH, KEMPLEY
15 miles from Knightwick Parish
Delightful Norman church, displaying one of the most outstandingly complete and well preserved sets of medieval wall paintings in England, dating from the 12th and 14th centuries.
ROTHERWAS CHAPEL
16 miles from Knightwick Parish
Family chapel of the Bodenham family. The originally simple medieval building has a fine Elizabethan timber roof, 18th century tower and striking Victorian interior decoration and furnishings.
ODDA'S CHAPEL
18 miles from Knightwick Parish
One of the most complete surviving Saxon churches in England, this chapel was built in 1056 by Earl Odda, and rediscovered in 1865 subsumed into a farmhouse. Nearby is the famous Saxon parish church.
Churches in Knightwick Parish
Knightwick Chapel
You'll receive a warm welcome at each of the churches in the Worcestershire West Rural Team.
We are a group of 14 churches located in an outstandingly beautiful part of the English countryside, with the River Teme flowing through the middle and the Malvern Hills to the south.
We have two services a month at Knightwick Chapel. Other churches in our team offer both contemporary and traditional forms of worship, as well as midweek activities like Messy Church, homegroups and other events.
Knightwick chapel is a small, quaint building set in rolling countryside. Unfortunately it is not signposted! From the A44, take the turning to Alfrick, Lulsley and Suckley, and then take the right-hand fork to Suckley. Knightwick chapel is down the first lane on your left. Parking is very limited. (Don't take the turning off the A44 to Knightwick itself: the church building there is no longer in use).