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==Religion== [[image:The Priory Church of Our Lady and St Cuthbert, Worksop - geograph.org.uk - 3701134.jpg|thumb|Worksop Priory]] Worksop has three churches, all of which are on the [[National Heritage List for England]]. {{main|Worksop Priory}} Officially titled the Priory Church of Saint Mary and Saint Cuthbert, the [[Anglican]] parish church is usually known as Worksop Priory. It was an [[Augustinians|Augustinian]] [[priory]] founded in 1103. The church has a nave and detached gatehouse. Monks at the priory made the [[Tickhill Psalter]], an illuminated manuscript of the medieval period, now held in [[New York Public Library]]. After the [[dissolution of the monasteries]], the east end of the church fell into disrepair, but the townspeople were granted the nave as a parish church. The eastern parts of the building have been restored in several phases, the most recent being in the 1970s when architect Lawrence King rebuilt the crossing. [[File:Worksop Priory Interior.jpg|thumb|Worksop Priory Interior]] St. Anne's Church is an Anglican [[parish church]] and is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade-II [[Listed building#England and Wales|listed building]].<ref>{{NHLE |num= 1045754 |desc= Church of St Anne, Worksop |access-date=30 August 2012 |mode=cs2 |postscript=none}}</ref> The church was built in 1911 by the [[Lancaster, Lancashire|Lancaster]] architects [[Austin and Paley]].{{sfn|Pevsner|1979|p=389}}{{sfn |Brandwood |Austin |Hughes |Price |2012 |p=248}} The church has an historic pipe organ originally built by [[Gray and Davison]] in 1852 for [[Clapham]] [[Congregational church|Congregational Church]].{{see also|St Anne's Church, Worksop}} [[image:St Anne's Church, Worksop - geograph.org.uk - 6992681.jpg|thumb|St Anne's Church]] St. John's Church is a parish church built between 1867 and 1868 by architect [[Robert Clarke (architect)|Robert Clarke]].{{see also|St John's Church, Worksop}} [[St Mary's Church, Worksop|St Mary's]] is a [[Roman Catholic]] church, built from 1838 to 1840 and paid for by the [[Bernard Howard, 12th Duke of Norfolk]], after the sale of [[Worksop Manor]], which the duke owned. The church was designed by [[Matthew Ellison Hadfield]] and it is a Grade II-listed building. In late 1913, the church was visited by [[Archduke Franz Ferdinand]] seven months before [[assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand|his assassination in Sarajevo]].<ref name=stock>[[Historic England]], [https://taking-stock.org.uk/building/worksop-st-mary/ Worksop β St Mary], ''Taking Stock'', retrieved 5 May 2022</ref> Relatively few religious minorities live in the town, with the largest non-Christian community being Worksop's 243 Muslims.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Worksop |url=https://www.citypopulation.de/en/uk/eastmidlands/nottinghamshire/E35001286__worksop/}}</ref> A small community and prayer centre for adherents is on Watson Road.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.worksopguardian.co.uk/news/muslim-prayer-centre-to-open-in-worksop-2138150|title=Muslim prayer centre to open in Worksop|date=12 August 2016|website=Worksop Guardian}}</ref>
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