Richard Taylor (born 1967) is a British author, broadcaster and practising lawyer best known for his books, television and radio programmes on Christian imagery, symbolism, history and law.
His book How to Read a Church has sold over 100,000 copies and been translated into five languages.[5] He is the writer and presenter of the six-part BBC Four series Churches: How to Read Them broadcast in September and October 2010.[6] Since 2014 he has been a guest presenter for BBC Songs of Praise, presenting items on Chaucer, Shakespeare, Austen, the Brontë family, the UK patron saints, Henry V, and the birthplaces of the Christian denominations.[7]
He wrote and presented Still Ringing After All These Years: A Short History of Bells[8] and Pugin: God's own architect (2012),[9] also on BBC Four, and Copyright or Wrong on BBC Radio 4.[10]
Bibliography
How to Read a Church. A guide to images symbols and meanings in churches and cathedrals, Rider, 2003 ISBN1-84413-053-3
How to Read a Church. Illustrated Edition, Rider, 2004 ISBN1-84413-238-2
How to Read an English Garden, Ebury, 2006 (co-author with Andrew Eburne) ISBN0-09-190900-7