| YORKMINSTER | Cathedral in northern England (4,7) |
| YORK | Where in England is the largest gothic cathedral in northern Europe? (4) |
| SHROUDOFTURIN | Linen cloth housed in a cathedral in northern Italy |
| AACHEN | German city with the oldest cathedral in northern Europe |
| TYNEANDWEAR | County in northern England between Durham and Northumberland (4,3,4) |
| WESTMINSTER | RC cathedral in London (11) |
| LUDGATEHILL | The site of St Paul's Cathedral in London |
| CHRISTOPHER | English architect who designed St Paul's Cathedral, in the English Baroque style, after the Great Fire of London (11,4) |
| HARUMSCARUM | Reckless, having drunk a hot drink on top of cathedral in Salisbury once (5-6) |
| KNUR | A small wooden or porcelain ball used in a game mainly played in northern England (4) |
| LEEDS | City in northern England in the county known as "God's Own Country" (5) |
| NEWCASTLE | City in northern England, to which, in the proverb, it is unnecessary to carry coals |
| PENNINES | North -; region of heather moorland and wooded valleys in northern England, designated an AONB in 1988 (8) |
| SALE | Disposal of dirty French goods in a town in Northern England? (4) |
| RIPON | A cathedral city in northern England (pop about 17,000) (5) |
| PET | Word originally used in Scotland to mean "a hand-reared lamb" and in northern England "a spoilt or favourite child", later any domesticated animal kept for companionship (3) |
| TARN | A river in southern France; a lake in northern England |
| LUDDITE | One of a band of destroyers of machinery in northern England in about 1812 (7) |
| WINDERMERE | Lake in northern England where Sir Henry Segrave broke the world water speed record in 1930 (10) |
| SOPHIA | Building in Istanbul that was the largest cathedral in the world for nearly a thousand years until the completion of the Seville Cathedral in 1520 |