St Peter Mancroft

It was originally established by Ralph de Gael, Earl of East Anglia, between 1066 and 1075.

The North transept displays a collection of church silver, including the Gleane and Thistle cups, as well as memorabilia associated with the physician-philosopher Thomas Browne, author of Religio Medici (1642).

[5] George Edmund Street published an exhaustive study of the church in 1879,[6] and in 1896 a small lead-covered spire with flying buttresses was added, designed by his son A. E.

[3] In 1850 two L-shaped trenches accommodating a number of acoustic jars were discovered beneath the wooden floor on which the choir stalls had previously stood.

The earthenware jars were built into its walls at intervals of about three feet, with the mouths facing into the trenches.

Nave and chancel
Organ by Peter Collins of 1984