English Heritage sites near Langleydale and Shotton Parish
BARNARD CASTLE
5 miles from Langleydale and Shotton Parish
Set on a high rock, Barnard Castle takes it name from its 12th-century founder, Bernard de Balliol. It was later developed by the Beauchamp family and then passed into the hands of Richard III.
EGGLESTONE ABBEY
5 miles from Langleydale and Shotton Parish
The charming ruins of a small monastery of Premonstratensian 'white canons', picturesquely set above a bend in the River Tees near Barnard Castle.
BOWES CASTLE
8 miles from Langleydale and Shotton Parish
The impressive ruins of Henry II's 12th-century keep, on the site of a Roman fort guarding the approach to strategic Stainmore Pass over the Pennines.
STANWICK IRON AGE FORTIFICATIONS
10 miles from Langleydale and Shotton Parish
An excavated section, part cut into rock, of the ramparts of the huge Iron Age trading and power-centre of the Brigantes, the most important tribe in pre- Roman northern Britain.
AUCKLAND CASTLE DEER HOUSE
10 miles from Langleydale and Shotton Parish
A charming Gothic Revival 'eyecatcher' built in 1760 in the park of the Bishops of Durham. It provided deer with shelter and food, and had grounds for picnics and rooms for enjoying the view.
PIERCEBRIDGE ROMAN BRIDGE
10 miles from Langleydale and Shotton Parish
Stonework foundations, now marooned in a field, of a bridge which once led to Piercebridge Roman Fort.
No churches found in Langleydale and Shotton Parish
No churches found in Langleydale and Shotton Parish