Crowland Abbey
Shit at night a week before Halloween so kinda fitted the bill.
Around the Peterborough district on the Lincolnshire border, Crowland (or Croyland another name for it) Abbey is a landmark across the fields of the Fens.
The ruins today are all that remains of a large Monastery which dated back to the 7th Century when a monk called Guthlac came this remote settlement that was originally an Island amongst a load of marshland.
After the dissolution of the Monasteries courtesy of Henry VIII the ruins were taken down but the North aisle was left and today serves as the parish church.
The tower also survived this ordeal, in this tower alone the first proper peal of bells was rung here in the 10th-Century, and the ropes are the longest ringing ropes in England.
Crowland Abbey
Shit at night a week before Halloween so kinda fitted the bill.
Around the Peterborough district on the Lincolnshire border, Crowland (or Croyland another name for it) Abbey is a landmark across the fields of the Fens.
The ruins today are all that remains of a large Monastery which dated back to the 7th Century when a monk called Guthlac came this remote settlement that was originally an Island amongst a load of marshland.
After the dissolution of the Monasteries courtesy of Henry VIII the ruins were taken down but the North aisle was left and today serves as the parish church.
The tower also survived this ordeal, in this tower alone the first proper peal of bells was rung here in the 10th-Century, and the ropes are the longest ringing ropes in England.