Bede. Venerable, The. An Ecclesiastical History of the English People. The History translated by Leo Sherley-Price. Penguin Books. First published 1955. ISBN 0 14 044565 X
Blair. J. The Church in Anglo-Saxon Society. Oxford University Press 2005. ISBN 978 0 19 921117 3 (paperback)
Davis. R.H.C. A History of Medieval Europe. Publ. Longmans, Green & Co. London 1957.
Eaton. Tim. Plundering the Past: Roman Stonework in Medieval Britain. Tempus. 2000. ISBN 0 7524 1903 X
Fernie, Eric. The Architecture of the Anglo-Saxons. B.T.Batsford Ltd. 1983. ISBN 0 7134 1582 7
Fisher. D.J.V. The Anglo-Saxon Age. Longman. 1973. ISBN 0 582 482771
Fisher. E.A. The Greater Anglo-Saxon Churches, an Architectural Historical Study. Faber and Faber Ltd. 1962
Fisher. E.A. The Saxon Churches of Sussex. David & Charles 1970
Fletcher. Banister. Prof. A History of Architecture. B.T.Batsford. MCMV.
Higham. N.J. The Kingdom of Northumbria AD350-1100. Alan Sutton Publ Ltd. 1993. ISBN 0 86299 730 5
Hills. Catherine. Origins of the English. Duckworth. 2003. ISBN 0 7156 3191
Hindley, Geoffrey. A Brief History of The Anglo-Saxons. Constable & Robinson Ltd. 2006. ISBN 978 1 84529 161 7
Kerr. Nigel and Mary. A Guide to Anglo-Saxon sites. Granada Publishing Ltd. 1982. ISBN 0 586 08423 1 (paperback)
Laing. Lloyd & Jennifer. Anglo-Saxon England. Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd. 1979. ISBN 0 7100 01134
Randers-Pehrson, Justine D. Barbarians and Romans. The Birth Struggle of Europe, AD 400-700. Book Club Assoc. London. 1983.
Rodwell.W. Archaeology of the English Church, The. (The study of historic churches and churchyards). Batsford. ISBN 0 7134 2590 3
Smyth. Alfred P. King Alfred The Great. Oxford University Press 1995. ISBN 0 19 822989 5
Stenton. Sir. Frank. Anglo-Saxon England. Oxford University Press. First publ 1943. ISBN 0 19 8217161
Swanton. M.J. Translated & edited by. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. J.M.Dent 1966. ISBN 0 460 87737 2
Taylor. Dr. H.M. & Joan. Anglo-Saxon Architecture. 3 volumes. Cambridge University Press. 1965 & 1978
Wacher. J. The Towns of Roman Britain. B.T.Batsford. 1974.
Useful links.
The Peak District; the continuity of Roman rule and their alliance with the Pecsaete and the Mercian state.
The Society for Church Archaeology.
Medieval Wall Painting in the English Parish Church.
British Archaeology Magazine, article by Tim Eaton (plundering Roman stone).
Professor W.Rodwell, publications by, a list of.
Anglo-Saxon church building, by Professor W.Rodwell (pdf file).
The Introduction and Use of Masons' Marks in Romanesque Building in England, by Jennifer.S.Alexander.
The Ecclesiological Society (the successor to the Cambridge Camden Society).
The Chapel of St Laurence, Bradford on Avon, Wilts; excavations and report by Southampton University.
Drawings of Deerhurst church (1000 years ago).
Information.
John Buckler, artist (1770 - 1851). Born in Calbourne on the Isle of Wight, Buckler practised as an architect until 1830. His first engraving was of Lincoln cathedral, and by 1814 had encompassed all the cathedrals in England. This also included many of the collegiate and parish churches. Forty-two volumes of his sketches are now held by the British Library. Other places holding collections of his work include the Devizes Museum in Wiltshire, Taunton Museum, the William Salt Library in Stafford and the Bodleian Library in Oxford.
I acknowledge with thanks my source for the above information; ''Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.''
Click here for main menu (including photo pages of individual selected churches).
Click here, over 400 Saxon churches listed! - a downloadable table (unique to this site) which gives information of the known churches in England exhibiting Saxon features and fabric (and with details of those features), a comprehensive listing noted by place name, county, and grid reference; wholly based on H.Taylor's three sterling volumes, "Anglo-Saxon Architecture".
background picture: crypt, church of St.Wystan, Repton.
www.anglo-saxon-architecture.co.uk