English Heritage sites near Kings Caple Parish

Goodrich Castle

GOODRICH CASTLE

6 miles from Kings Caple Parish

Goodrich stands majestically on a wooded hill commanding the passage of the River Wye into the picturesque valley of Symonds Yat.

Rotherwas Chapel

ROTHERWAS CHAPEL

6 miles from Kings Caple 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.

St Mary's Church, Kempley

ST MARY'S CHURCH, KEMPLEY

6 miles from Kings Caple 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.

St Briavels Castle

ST BRIAVELS CASTLE

15 miles from Kings Caple Parish

The fine twin-towered gatehouse, built by Edward I in 1292, once defended a crossbow bolt factory which used local iron. Once a prison, now a youth hostel in wonderful walking country.

Longtown Castle

LONGTOWN CASTLE

15 miles from Kings Caple Parish

A powerful thick-walled round keep of c.1150 on a large earthen mound within a stone-walled bailey. Set in the beautiful Olchon valley, with magnificent views of the Black Mountains.

Over Bridge

OVER BRIDGE

17 miles from Kings Caple Parish

A single-arch stone bridge spanning the River Severn, built in 1825-30 by the great engineer Thomas Telford.


Churches in Kings Caple Parish

Kings Caple: St John the Baptist

Kings Caple Ross on Wye
07824444655

Saint John the Baptist church, Kings Caple, is one of the churches in the StowCaple group. 

The village of Kings Caple gots its name to distinguish it from the two other "Caples" nearby, How Caple and Caplefore (Brockhampton) and because the originally Welsh-speaking inhabitants now owed allegiance to their English kings.

The churchyard stands on the bailey of a Norman castle, whose motte, known as Caple Tump, stands across the road. This road was part of a Roman road called Caple Street.

The Nave and Chancel are the oldest parts of the church and were built in the 13th century. The tower was added in the 14th century and the last additions - the porch and Lady Chapel - were added in about 1400.

The six windows on the south side are all different and the oldest of these is the high window in the nave built about mid to late 13th century.
 
Othe features are the pulpit which is Jacobean. The pews were installed in 1638.

The gallery, where the organ once stood, was put up early in the 18th century. Here stands the Benefactions Board from 1796; this shows the six charities established for the Poor by local landowners and their tenants. One of them is called Cake Money by which Pax Cakes ( a type of biscuit) were, and are still distributed every Palm Sunday to the congregations of this church and nearby Sellack and Hentland churches, accompanied by the greeting "Peace and Good Neighbourhood".

The church has six bells, the oldest dating from 1632.

The churchyard contains the graves of inhabitants dating back to the 16th century.  


No churches found in Kings Caple Parish