The Greater Churches Network is a self-help organisation within the Church of England. There are currently 41 churches within the Greater Churches Network.
Several of these buildings are former monastic properties that were converted to parish church use after the English Reformation. Others are large parish churches built at a time of great wealth. What they share in common are the requirements to offer facilities to a large number of visitors, host special services, offer community access and fund the specialist maintenance and repair of these large buildings, most of which are Grade I listed.
Aims
It aims to provide help and mutual support to its member churches in dealing with the special problems of running a "cathedral-like" church with the organisation and financial structure of a parish church. The group meets every two years in conference to share ideas.[1]
References
- ↑ Church of England Year Book 2008. London: Church House Publishing. 2007. ISBN 0-7151-1027-6.
External links
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- All Saints' Church, Hertford
- All Saints Church, Kingston upon Thames
- Bath Abbey
- Beverley Minster
- Bolton Abbey
- Church of St Mary the Great, Cambridge
- Christchurch Priory
- Great Yarmouth Minster
- St George's Minster, Doncaster
- Halifax Minster
- Hexham Abbey
- Holy Trinity Church, Hull
- Holy Trinity Church, Stratford-upon-Avon
- King's Lynn Minster
- Kendal Parish Church
- Lancaster Priory
- Leeds Minster
- Malvern Priory
- Romsey Abbey
- Rotherham Minster
- St Botolph with St Christopher, Boston
- St Chad's Church, Shrewsbury
- St Laurence Church, Ludlow
- St Martin in the Bull Ring
- St Martin-in-the-Fields
- St Mary's Church, Nottingham
- St Mary Magdalene, Newark-on-Trent
- St Mary Redcliffe
- Collegiate Church of St Mary, Warwick
- St Wulfram's Church, Grantham
- St Peter Mancroft
- St Peter's Church, Harrogate
- Selby Abbey
- Sherborne Abbey
- Shrewsbury Abbey
- Sunderland Minster
- Tewkesbury Abbey
- Wimborne Minster
- St Peter's Collegiate Church
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