I'm quite pleased because I might have missed this if I'd cut through (I don't know, it's possible).
Here's the Corpus Clock, a modern and intriguing timepiece that one could just walk past without really noticing.
One thing I really loved was how you can glance down a side alley and go from modern to historical in twenty paces!
Just look at those chimneys!
The chapel is a reverse Tardis - it seems so much bigger on the outside but when you walk in, apart from the height which is most impressive, it feels smaller and almost intimate.
A poor photo of the absolutely amazing fan vaulted ceiling.
Evidence of the Tudor dynasty is everywhere you look. Tudor roses, the Beaufort portcullis (Henry VII's mother was Margaret Beaufort, the don't-know-how-many-great granddaughter of John of Gaunt and his mistress, then wife, Katherine Swynford, one of my favourite ladies of history) and coats of arms galore!
R A - Regina Anna - or Anne Boleyn, carved during the brief time she was queen and lucky to still be there. Most were defaced/removed shortly after her death. A really good bit of dating evidence!
There's also just one memory of Kathryn Howard's brief reign too - in a stained glass window, I believe but I couldn't see it.
Where the world famous choir sits - one side of it anyway!
There's a number of side chapels, all of which are interesting. This particular one memorialises those from the College that dies in both World Wars - in the photo is the wall for WW1.
From the looks on people's faces, we were all finding it a very sombre place as we teeter on the brink of a third world war . . .
Another bit of Anne Boleyn. H A - Henry Anne
View from the bridge over a wild flower meadow towards the chapel.
No, I didn't!
So many lovely old dwellings.
And my final destination, the Round Church. Absolutely lovely, not the least bit fancy, built around 1130 and only one of four round churches still in use in England. Another is Little Maplestead, here in Essex. Must look it up as I go pretty much past it on the way to Center Parcs.
The columns and arches
It was an active church until the congregation grew too large, proving very popular with students
There's a lovely 'social' area to one side.
Standing in the middle of the round bit with the church history of Cambridge displayed around the outside. It was very interesting.
These stone faces were added by renovators in the 1840s. Some were the stonemasons' faces but, somehow, I think someone was playing a joke with this one.
























