• 1. All Saints, Beckingham, Nottinghamshire, England
    General view.
    Parish church
    A parish church consisting of a chancel, nave with clerestory, N and S aisles, W tower and S porch. The N aisle arcade is of five bays while the S arcade is of three. The interior of the church is mostly 13thc. with enlargement and replacement of the windows and insertion of the clerestory in the 15thc. or 16thc. A portion of a rood screen, dating to about 1500, remains under the tower. Restoration of the church was undertaken by Ewan Christian in 1892. The only Romanesque feature is the font.
  • 2. St Margaret, Bilsthorpe, Nottinghamshire, England
    Font.
    Parish church
    The church consists of a chancel, nave, W tower and S porch. The Savile transeptal chapel was added by T.C. Hine, who restored the church in 1873. The two-light square-headed chancel window isc.1400 whilst the pointed chancel arch is probably 100 years or so earlier. In the floor of the nave is a 14thc. grave slab of unusual design. The tower bears a repair date of 1663, and an epitaph to William Chappell, Bishop of Cork and Ross, who spent some time at Bilsthorpe during the Civil War and died in Derby in 1649. The only Romanesque feature is the font.
  • 3. St Giles, Carburton, Nottinghamshire, England
    General view of church from S.
    Parish church
    A small chapel consisting of a nave and chancel with W bellcote and S porch. Largely Romanesque fabric though now rendered. W window of 14thc., chancel windows of 13thc. According to Pevsner, the S aisle was removed before 1748. The S porch was renewed in about 1958. Formerly in the parish of Edwinstowe; now linked with Worksop Priory.
  • 4. St Mary, Car Colston, Nottinghamshire, England
    Font, general view.
    Parish church
    The church consists of a chancel, N and S aisles, nave and W tower and S porch. The earliest part of the existing structure is the lower part of the tower, which is 13thc., the remainder of the tower being Perp faced with Ancaster stone. The chancel and nave date from the 14thc. There is a very fine 14thc. piscina and sedilia on the S side of the chancel. The font is the only Romanesque feature.
  • 5. St Mary, Egmanton, Nottinghamshire, England
    General view of church from S.
    Parish church
    A parish church consisting of a chancel, clerestoried nave, N aisle, S transept and W tower. The windows in the S transept are late 14thc. whilst the W tower is 15thc. The church and tower were much restored in 1893 and the chancel rebuilt in 1897 by Ninian Comper under the patronage of the 7th Duke of Newcastle. The Romanesque features are a plain S doorway, the N arcade and the font.
  • 6. Holy Trinity, Everton, Nottinghamshire, England
    S doorway, tympanum.
    Parish church
    The church consists of a nave, chancel with apsidal sanctuary, S transept, S porch and N aisle. The tower and nave are late 11thc. (the chancel and tower arches are c. 1080). The N aisle was added in the late 12thc., i.e. c.1190, and the N arcade of two bays is Transitional. The apse and the S transept were added in 1841. The Romanesque elements are the tympanum over the S door, the chancel arch (W side) and the remains of a disused font.
  • 7. Holy Trinity and St Oswald, Finningley, Nottinghamshire, England
    General view.
    Parish church
    The church consists of a chancel, nave, N aisle, W tower and S porch. The chancel and the N aisle are 14thc. The W tower and the walls of the nave are post-Conquest and appear to date from about 1080. The round-headed tower arch is chamfered, with chamfered imposts, but otherwise plain. On each face of the tower are double round-headed (arcuated lintels) openings with a central shaft between them (the shafts appear to be modern) which have a chamfered impost in place of a capital. The double windows are set within round-headed, chamfered openings. Romanesque sculpture is found on the S doorway and the font.
  • 8. St Peter, Flawborough, Nottinghamshire, England
    General view of the church from N.
    Parish church
    A small red brick parish church entirely rebuilt in 1840-41 and consisting of a chancel, nave and W tower. An inscription over the W door gives the date 1840. Both the font and W doorway appear to be reused work of c. 1150.
  • 9. St Michael the Archangel, Halam, Nottinghamshire, England
    General view.
    Parish church
    The church consists of a chancel with S vestry, nave with S aisle, N porch and W tower. While the chancel arch dates from the 12thc., the nave and chancel appear to be 13thc. The tower and S aisle were added in the early 14thc. One of the two bells in the truncated tower is said to date from before 1200. The church was much restored between 1884-89.
  • 10. St Swithun, Kirklington, Nottinghamshire, England
    General view.
    Parish church
    The church consists of a chancel with shallow S transept, nave, S porch and W tower. Though the church is of stone, with render in places, the W tower is of brick. The body of the church appears to be 13thc. though the chancel was rebuilt in 1873/4 when the small transept currently housing the organ appears to have been added. The tower is 17thc. The only Romanesque features are the font and a reset lintel.
  • 11. St Peter, Laneham, Nottinghamshire, England
    General view of church from N.
    Parish church
    The church consists of a chancel, nave, N aisle, S porch and W tower. Portions of the fabric of the Norman church remain with herringbone masonry evident in the walls. The N arcade is 13thc. and the S side of the chancel has a 13thc. window, whilst the straight headed window in the N wall of the chancel and those of the N aisle are 14thc. The S porch has 14thc. timbers but was rebuilt in 1923. The Romanesque features are the chancel arch and the font. The W tower, though essentially Romanesque in date, has later openings.