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Well, the architecture is clearly 11th century, possibly a fortified abbey or priory. As you evoke an historical event and there are numerous fortified ecclesiastical buildings in France, may I suggest it may have been where Guillaume the Bastard of Normandy was crowned, later William the Conq????Brian (the devil incarnate)
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Could it be Lindisfarne Priory aka Holy Island, off the NE coast of England?
Holy Island's importance as a religious centre dates from AD 635, when the ecclesiastic St. Aidan established a church and monastery there with the aim of converting the Northumbrians. The Lindisfarne Gospels (produced on the island and now housed in the British Museum) are fine examples of 7th-century illuminated manuscripts. The threatof Danish raids caused the monastery to be abandoned in 875, and the monks fled inland with the body of St. Cuthbert (the sixth bishop), eventually settling at what became the inland cathedral city of Durham. The prior and convent of Durham refounded the monastery in 1082, and it was garrisoned at the end of the 16th century.Brian (the devil incarnate)
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Well, believe it or not, I lived quite close to Lindisfarne from 1957 to 1963, but I've never been on the island. The causeway is quite a problem as the tides can be deadly. I've been to numerous other Northumbrian sites, but not that one.
I know what I want to show for the next one, but I have it only on video. Rather than rip it, I'll have a look first to see whether I can find it on the 'Net. Will post it ASAP.Brian (the devil incarnate)
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