• 1. St Mary and the Holy Cross, Alderminster, Warwickshire, England
    View from E.
    Parish church
    Aisleless and cruciform in plan with a chancel, N and S transepts, nave, N porch and central tower. The crossing is of 1193 (Pevsner) as is the N transept. The S transept and chancel are 13thc. (VCH) In 1874 and 1884, the nave was practically rebuilt and a modern "Romanesque" doorway was inserted in the S wall. The late 12thc. N doorway survives, although with restored tympanum. Three small, plain lancets also survive, one in the N and one in the S wall of the nave and the third in the W wall of the N transept.
  • 2. St Peter, Bickenhill, Warwickshire, England
    View from SW.
    Parish church
    The church consists of a Perpendicular nave, chancel, N aisle and W tower. The N aisle arcade is 12thc. The S doorway has reset 12thc. features.
  • 3. St Michael, Budbrook, Warwickshire, England
    Church Plan
    Parish church
    Except for the blocked N nave doorway, which bears Romanesque sculpture, the church dates from the 13thc. onwards, with 19thc. transepts.
  • 4. St Nicholas, Kenilworth, Warwickshire, England
    Church Plan
    Parish church
    The church, of local red sandstone, comprises W tower, nave with N and S aisles and chancel and is essentially Perpendicular, with Tudor additions. It was restored in 1864, and two transepts and a S chapel were added. The reset W doorway, set in the tower, comprises mainly 12thc. carved stones and mouldings.
  • 5. St George the Martyr, Newbold Pacey, Warwickshire, England
    Church Plan
    Parish church
    The original church burnt down in 1880 and was rebuilt by J L Pearson in 1881-2 in 13thc. style (VCH). It has nave, chancel, S aisle and transept and NW tower. Two 12thc. doorways were reused in the new church.
  • 6. St Mary the Virgin, Stoneleigh, Warwickshire, England
    N doorway, general view
    Parish church
    The Chancel and W tower are substantially 12thc., but the remainder, including a 14thc. S aisle, has been rebuilt. There is a plain round-headed window in the tower and Romanesque sculpture is found on the font, the blocked N doorway of the nave, the chancel arch, responds in the chancel and at the W end of the nave, and on a blind arcade on the interior E and S chancel walls, the last very heavily reconstructed. The church is of local red sandstone.
  • 7. Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Middle Tysoe, Warwickshire, England
    Tower, S doorway.
    Parish church
    A large parish church with N and S aisles, chancel, tower, S porch and vestry. There is a plain splayed round-headed 12thc. window on the W face of the tower and the remains of two plain, round-headed windows on the wall above the S arcade, the interiors deeply splayed. The tower also has a plain round-headed S doorway. 12thc. sculpture is found on the S doorway, and in the S arcade.
  • 8. St Peter, Wellesbourne, Worcestershire, England
    Chancel arch, general view
    Parish church
    The church consists of nave, N and S aisles and Perp. W tower. It was extensively rebuilt in 1873. A 12thc. chancel arch survives and this has been reset (and possibly lowered) on the N side of the chancel, and leads to the organ chamber.
  • 9. St Peter, Whatcote, Warwickshire, England
    Crossing, general view
    Parish church
    Simple church with nave and chancel. Romanesque N wall, with two plain splayed round-headed windows and a doorway bearing Romanesque sculpture; at the E end of this wall there is evidence on the interior only for a second doorway (part of a plain E jamb and arch).
  • 10. St Michael, Whichford, Warwickshire, England
    Church Plan
    Parish church
    Originally 12thc., with some of the original fabric still visible, the church has a 13thc. N aisle and 14thc. S chapel and chancel and an early 14thc. NW tower. 12thc. sculpture is found on the S doorway.
  • 11. St Mary, Whitchurch, Warwickshire, England
    Nave, N window, interior
    Parish church
    A small aisleless church, the W end of the nave is 11thc. (with some herringbone masonry), while the rest, to the chancel arch, is 12thc. The W part of the nave is slightly wider than the later part. There is a round-headed, plain 12thc. window in the N wall of the nave. 12thc. sculpture is found on the S doorway, the chancel arch and a pillar piscina.
  • 12. St Mary Magdalen, Wyken, Warwickshire, England
    Font
    Parish church
    The church consists of a 12thc. nave and chancel and a 15thc. W tower with a Victorian timber top incorporating a pyramidal tiled roof. Surviving 12thc. features include two plain, round-headed lancets in the chancel (N and S walls) and one in the nave (N wall) as well as traces of what was originally a group of three round-headed windows in the E wall of the chancel. Only the outer jambs of this group is still discernable owing to the insertion of a larger, later window. There are also blocked doorways in the N and S walls of the nave. The jambs and arch of the original S doorway now form the W doorway to the tower. The font is also of the 12thc.