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The monastic remains in Bedfordshire include the fine fragment of the church of the Augustinian priory at Dunstable, serving as the parish church ; Elstow Abbey near Bedford, which belonged to a Benedictine nunnery founded by Judith, niece of William the Conqueror in 1078 ; and portions of the Gilbertine Chicksands Priory and of a Cistercian foundation at Old Warden.
In the parish churches, many of which are of great interest, the predominant styles are Decorated and Perpendicular.
Work of pre-Conquest date, however, is found in the massive tower of Clapham church, the tower of St. Peter's Church in Bedford town centre, and in a door of St Mary the Virgin in Stevington.
Fine Norman and Early English work is seen at Dunstable and Elstow, and the later style is illustrated by the large cruciform churches at Leighton Buzzard and at Felmersham on the Ouse above Bedford.
Among the perpendicular additions to the church last named may be noted a very beautiful oaken rood screen.
To illustrate Decorated and Perpendicular the churches of Clifton and of Marston Moretaine, with its massive detached bell tower, may be mentioned ; and Cople church is a good specimen of fine Perpendicular work.
The church of Cockayne Hatley, near Potton, is fitted with rich Flemish carved wood, mostly from the abbey of Alne near Charleroi, and dating from 1689, but brought here by a former rector early in the 19th century.
In medieval domestic architecture the county is not rich.
The mansion of Woburn Abbey dates mainly from the middle of the 18th century in its present form.

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