From the Angel of the North to St Paul’s Cathedral in London, the 10 places that tell the history of England’s art, architecture and sculpture have been unveiled.

The 10 sites also include the Barbara Hepworth Museum and Sculpture Park, at the artist’s home and studio at St Ives, Cornwall, and the Minack Theatre perched on cliffs at Porthcurno, Penzance, Cornwall.

They form part of heritage agency Historic England’s campaign and podcast series Irreplaceable: A History of England in 100 Places.

Chatsworth House, Derbyshire, makes the top 10 for art, architecture and sculpture (Chatsworth House Trust/PA)
Chatsworth House, Derbyshire, makes the top 10 for art, architecture and sculpture (Chatsworth House Trust/PA)

Art, architecture and sculpture is the ninth out of 10 categories unveiled, which also include science and discovery, sport and leisure, faith and belief and industry, trade and commerce, with details about the latest sites in a new podcast.

A final category, “power, protest and progress”, is still yet to be revealed.

The sites which tell the history of England’s art, architecture and sculpture have been selected by BBC arts editor Will Gompertz, from hundreds of public nominations.

They include Anglo-Saxon treasures in a boat burial at Sutton Hoo, Suffolk, designer William Morris’ Cotswold retreat and source of inspiration, Kelmscott Manor, Oxfordshire, and the magnificent Chatsworth House in Derbyshire.

Coventry Cathedral was built next to the ruin of the old cathedral, destroyed in a bombing raid (Historic England/PA)
Coventry Cathedral was built next to the ruin of the old cathedral, destroyed in a bombing raid (Historic England/PA)

Coventry Cathedral, which rises beside the ruins of the old cathedral destroyed by a bombing raid in the Second World War, and leading art sites Yorkshire Sculpture Park and Tate Modern in London complete the list.

Duncan Wilson, chief executive of Historic England, said: “These 10 choices represent the huge range of our most precious places, all of them special and significant around the world.

“They are symbols of great cultural and artistic achievement, from cathedrals and great houses to iconic sculptures, a theatre in a stunning natural setting and one of the greatest galleries of modern art in the world created in an abandoned power station.

The mounds at Sutton Hoo were found to contain Anglo Saxon burial treasures (National Trust/PA)
The mounds at Sutton Hoo were found to contain Anglo Saxon burial treasures (National Trust/PA)

“These places all have a strong identity, and bring people together in a spirit of wonder and enquiry. They fully deserve to be celebrated.”

The full list is:

– Angel of the North, Gateshead, Tyne and Wear

– Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Wakefield, West Yorkshire

– Barbara Hepworth Museum and Sculpture Park, St Ives, Cornwall

– St Paul’s Cathedral, London

– Kelmscott Manor, Kelmscott, Oxfordshire

– Chatsworth House, Bakewell, Derbyshire

– Tate Modern, London

– Sutton Hoo, Suffolk

– Coventry Cathedral, West Midlands

– The Minack Theatre, Porthcurno, Penzance, Cornwall