• 1. St Chad, Bishops Tachbrook, Warwickshire, England
    N doorway, general view
    Parish church.
    A two aisled church with a late 14thc. tower. The chancel is basically 12thc., but the S windows have been replaced and two on the N side of the chancel have been blocked. There are remains of the upper part of a large round arch over a later window in the E wall of the S aisle. Romanesque sculpture survives on the doorway to the N aisle. There is a badly eroded font which could be 12thc. and is therefore included.
  • 2. Holy Trinity, Churchover, Warwickshire, England
    Exterior view.
    Parish church
    The church was largely rebuilt 1896-7, although the S doorway is Early English and the S arcade ofc.1300 (Pevsner). The church consists of chancel, nave, two aisles and a Perpendicular W tower. The font is 12thc. as is a reset capital.
  • 3. St Peter and St Paul, Coleshill, Warwickshire, England
    View from S.
    Parish church
    The font is the only Romanesque feature. The present church dates fromc.1340 (Pevsner suggestsc.1385), although drastically restored 1868-9.
  • 4. St Mary, Cubbington, Warwickshire, England
    Church Plan
    Parish church
    Built of local red sandstone, the church consists of an ashlar chancel, nave, 12thc. rubble-work W tower, and N and S aisles. The tower has one round-headed window with a plain, restored lintel. The S arcade to the nave and the font are 12thc. The S aisle itself is said to be 13thc. The S wall of the nave was raised to allow the clerestory windows to be inserted (church guide).
  • 5. St Nicholas and St Peter ad Vincula, Curdworth, Warwickshire, England
    View from E.
    Parish church
    The church consists of an aisleless nave and chancel of 12thc. origin, a Perpendicular W tower and S porch. The chancel has two 12thc. clasping, corner buttresses at the E end with one central buttress shortened to make way for a large 14thc. window. The N and S walls have central buttresses. The nave has three buttresses intact on the S side; similarly on the N side. There is a 12thc. blocked N doorway to the nave and a plain deeply splayed high-level window also in the N wall. In the S wall the slightly splayed internal reveals of the S doorway survive. In the chancel there are two plain, deeply splayed high-level windows in the N wall and one remaining in the S wall. Sections of a plain chamfered interior string course remain in the chancel. 12thc. sculpture is found on the chancel arch and the font.
  • 6. St Peter,Dunchurch, Warwickshire, England
    Distant view from W.
    Parish church
    The church is substantially of the 14thc, consisting of chancel, nave, N and S aisles to nave and N aisle to chancel, vestry and a 15thc. W tower. The font is the only 12thc. feature.
  • 7. St Laurence, Foleshill, Warwickshire, England
    General view from SW.
    Parish church
    The church consists of nave, chancel, N and S aisles, S transept, S porch, N vestry and W tower. The tower and N aisle are Perp. whilst most other features are 19thc. and 20thc. The font is 12thc.
  • 8. St James the Great, Idlicote, Warwickshire, England
    View from SW.
    Parish church
    Small church of nave, chancel, S chapel and S aisle dating from early or mid 12thc. (VCH). S chapel is 17thc. and S aisle and chancel 13thc. Earlier parts built in grey lias limestone, later additions in liassic ironstone, both varieties fairly local. The nave N wall contains a 12thc. doorway with a plain round head and nook-shafts with scalloped capitals.
  • 9. 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.
  • 10. Holy Trinity, Norton Lindsey, Warwickshire, England
    Font.
    Parish church
    In grey/pink sandstone, this small church comprises a chancel, nave, modern N aisle and S porch. The chancel has lancet windows with deeply splayed reveals, and the doorway is of similar date. The font is the only feature that might be ascribed to the Romanesque period.
  • 11. St Mary, Oldberrow, Warwickshire, England
    View from SE.
    Parish church
    A small rectangular building with a screen to divide nave from chancel, all dating from rebuilding in 1875. However, a 12thc. pillar piscina (not mentioned by Pevsner) was retained and set in the SE angle. There is also a small 12thc. round-headed window in the S wall.
  • 12. St Laurence, Oxhill, Warwickshire, England
    Church Plan
    Parish church
    The church is aisleless with a 15thc. W tower and an essentially 12thc. nave and chancel. 12thc. sculpture is found on N and S doorways, on two windows in the chancel and one in the nave, and on the chancel arch and font.
  • 13. St Swithin, Quinton, Warwickshire, England
    General view from E.
    Parish church
    Church consisting of nave with early 12thc. S arcade of two bays and late 12thc. N arcade of three bays. 13thc. chancel, N and S aisles and tower with 15thc. spire. N porch and late 12thc. font near N doorway.
  • 14. St Leonard, Ryton-on-Dunsmore, Warwickshire, England
    View from SE.
    Parish church
    Aisleless church with chancel, nave, S porch, vestry and 15thc. W tower. Both nave and chancel are pre-1100 (Pevsner) and are probably of 1080 (Church Guide). Sculpture is found on the N and S doorways to the nave, N and S chancel windows and the recut font. A number of later windows have been inserted and there are many alterations ofc.1800, in red brick. The original nave and chancel are of local red sandstone, and the tower of grey sandstone.
  • 15. Shotteswell , Warwickshire, England
    Distant view from W.
    Parish church
    A small church with chancel, nave, N and S aisles, a small sacristy entered from N aisle, W tower with spire and N, S and W doorways. The N arcade is 12thc. and a plain font may also date from this period. The Church is built of local liassic ironstone, probably from Hornton quarries nearby.
  • 16. 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.
  • 17. Holy Trinity, Sutton Coldfield, Warwickshire, England
    View from SE.
    Parish church
    Large church consisting of chancel, nave, two N aisles, a S aisle, S porch and W tower. Galleries have been inserted into N and S aisles and the W end. Of local red sandstone. The font is the only Romanesque feature.
  • 18. Tidmington, Warwickshire, England
    View from S.
    Parish church
    A small church dating fromc.1200, although much rebuilt, consisting of nave, early 13thc. W tower, early 16thc. chancel and modern S porch. Romanesque sculpture is found on the font and the late 12thc. or early 13thc. S doorway. Of shelly Edgehill-type liassic limestone and some blue lias.
  • 19. St Mary the Virgin, Walsgrave on Sowe, Coventry, Warwickshire, England
    General view from SE.
    Parish church.
    The chancel, nave, N and S aisles, vestry, S porch and W tower of the church all date from the 14th and 15thc. The SW corner of the church is now enveloped externally by recently built parish rooms. The font is the only Romanesque feature.
  • 20. St Michael, Warmington, Warwickshire, England
    Distant view.
    Parish church
    The church consists of chancel, nave, N and S aisles, N chapel, W tower and N, S and W doorways. Three bays of the N arcade are mid-12thc. and three bays of the S arcade are late 12thc. Built entirely in local liassic ironstone, probably from Hornton quarries nearby.
  • 21. St James, Weddington, Warwickshire, England
    View from SE.
    Parish church
    Small church, mainly of the 19thc. consisting of chancel, aisleless nave, S porch, N vestry and W tower. The font is the only Romanesque feature.
  • 22. 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.