Sledmere is also the site of an Eleanor cross: this is a replica, not one of the 12 original crosses.
Tottenham High Cross is often mistakenly thought to be an Eleanor cross.
The Market Cross in Glastonbury resembles an Eleanor cross.
It was designed by Herbert Palmer somewhat in the style of an Eleanor cross.
It contains what is thought to be the best surviving Eleanor cross.
The town was plundered by King Charles I's soldiers when passing through in June 1644, and Essex's men destroyed the Eleanor cross.
The architecture takes the form of an Eleanor cross.
The first of the Eleanor crosses was erected on Swine's Green, opposite the gates of St Catherine's.
The only remaining piece of the Eleanor cross left that survives is kept in Lincoln Castle.
Its location at Charing Cross is on the former site of the Eleanor cross which had stood on the site for three and a half centuries until 1647.