Jump to content

St Stephen's Church, Exeter

Coordinates: 50°43′26″N 3°31′47″W / 50.7240°N 3.5298°W / 50.7240; -3.5298
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

St Stephen's church
An anonymous watercolour of St Stephen's Bow and the Devonshire Arms c. 1900–1918 from the Royal Albert Memorial Museum's collection (62/1999).

St Stephen's Church is a small church in the centre of Exeter. It has a Saxon crypt but the first mention of the church is in the Domesday Book. Its location (now near the middle of the High Street) was formerly opposite the medieval guildhall.[1] In July 2012 it reopened following a major renovation which cost £1.5 million.[2]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "St Petrock's Church". Exeter Memories. Retrieved 20 September 2012.
  2. ^ "St Stephen's re-opens its doors marking nine years of successful fund-raising". Diocese of Exeter. Retrieved 20 September 2012.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Orme, Nicholas (2014) The Churches of Medieval Exeter, Impress Books, ISBN 9781907605512; pp. 166-69.
[edit]


50°43′26″N 3°31′47″W / 50.7240°N 3.5298°W / 50.7240; -3.5298