At one time, travel books were mostly church tour books. I’m looking now at the description in the 1928 edition of the Ward, Lock travel guide to south Dorset of St Anselm’s chapel, which sits, looking out to sea, on a headland south of Swanage: The headland is crowned with a chapel, massively constructed and heavily buttressed. It is related that this chapel was erected in 1140 by a sorrowing father who witnessed the drowning off the Head of his daughter and her newly married husband. The architecture is Norman, but the ecclesiastical origin of the building has been much disputed.