• 1. St Andrew, Marlesford, Suffolk, England
    Exterior from SE.
    Parish church
    Marlesford stands on the rising land on the N side of a tributary of the river Alde in the rolling arable land of central East Suffolk 2 miles NE of Wickham Market. The village extends from the hall and church in the N to the A12 which now forms its southern boundary. St Andrew's has a nave with a short S aisle and a S porch W of the aisle, a chancel and a W tower, all of flint. The earliest work is in the two-bay S arcade, which has circular piers with 12thc. imposts and bases, but later four-centred arches with two chamfered orders. For the rest, the N nave windows are square headed reticulated and the aisle windows 15thc. Perpendicular. The aisle is wide and was probably broadened when the arches and windows were remodelled . The gabled porch is 15thc. with flushwork decoration on its façade and a gabled parapet with wavy tracery. The chancel has a very plain arch and 14thc. fenestration with some 19thc. replacements. The tower is 15thc. and has diagonal W buttresses and a battlemented parapet with chequered flushwork.
  • 2. St Bartholomew, Orford, Suffolk, England
    Exterior from SE.
    Parish church
    Orford is a tiny coastal town in the sandlings of SE Suffolk, 16 miles due E of Ipswich. It was not mentioned in the Domesday Survey, but there was a successful port at the mouth of the river Alde and a market here by 1138. The town received a boost from the building of the castle by Henry II between 1165 and 1173, but its importance fell as the port silted up; the sea throwing up the long sand bar that now extends for over 5 miles from Orford Ness down to Hollesley. The town is simply laid out around the market place, with the church at its E end and the castle 0.27 km W of the market at the edge of the town. The road from Sudbourne runs right through the centre, alongside the market, to end at the quay at the town's S edge.
  • 3. St Mary, Polstead, Suffolk, England
    Exterior from SE.
    Parish church
    Polstead stands on a hilltop on the N side of the Box valley, some 8 miles N of Colchester and 11 miles W of Ipswich, set in a landscape of woodland and pasture. Church and hall are close together at the W of the village. St Mary's is a flint church with an aisled nave, chancel and W tower with a spire. Evidence of a unaisled 11thc. church can be seen in the long and short quoins alongside the tower in the W wall of the S nave aisle. The 12thc. nave arcades are of four bays, the westernmost bay being separated from the rest by a short stretch of walling. Above the arcade arches are the blocked openings of the 12thc. clerestory, now rendered obsolete by the raising of the aisles. At the W end can be seen the inside of the 12thc. facade, with the rere-arch of the W doorway and a window above. The elaborate front of the W doorway is now inside the 14thc. tower. At the E end, the chancel arch is also 12thc. and goes with the arcades, and the narrow, boxy chancel has a blocked 12thc. window. The most surprising feature of this campaign is that the arches of the arcade and chancel arch, the rere-arch of the W doorway, all the windows and the chancel quoins are of brick and tufa blocks. Both Pevsner and Mortlock point out that this is unlikely to be reused Roman brick, as the size is wrong. These may therefore be the earliest English bricks in the country — certainly predating those of Little Coggeshall Abbey (Essex) ofc.1200, which are similar in size. The nave aisles were been heightened and widened in the 14thc.; the E windows of the nave aisles are reticulated (S) or flowing (N), perhaps ofc.1350, but the lateral aisle windows are late Perpendicular, as is the chancel E window — evidence of a major campaign around 1500. The 14thc. campaign also included the building of the tower, the addition of two-light lateral chancel windows and the replacement of the nave roof timbers. At the same time the lateral nave doorways and porches were added, and a start was made on replacing the nave arcades with pointed arches. The W bay of the S arcade was replaced, and some work done on the E arches of both arcades, but the project was abandoned. The exterior of the nave roof is now double-pitched with a flat top. Thefts of lead from the roof led to the cladding being replaced with stainless steel in 1983-88, and dormer windows were added at this time to compensate for the lack of a clerestory. Romanesque sculpture recorded below is found in the W nave doorway, the nave arcades and the chancel arch.