• 1. Old Church, Alveston, Warwickshire, England
    Church Plan
    Parish church
    Of the church, only the 18thc. brick chancel survives. Romanesque carving is found on a reset tympanum and its supporting corbel capitals. A second plain tympanum lies half-buried in the grounds of the church.
  • 2. St Laurence, Ansley, Warwickshire, England
    View from SW.
    Parish church
    Substantially a complete 12thc. church with a Perpendicular W tower, 18thc. chancel extension and a N aisle of 1913. The church is of local red sandstone except for the N aisle wall in the pinker Hollington stone. 12thc. features described below are the reset N nave doorway, the chancel arch and stones carved with nailhead reset to decorate a niche in the N aisle. Other 12thc. features not described are a plain S nave doorway, traces of a N nave window and a blocked S chancel window.
  • 3. 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.
  • 4. Corley, Warwickshire, England
    S doorway, general view
    Parish church
    A small church with an early 12thc. nave, a later 12thc. N aisle and a chancel ofc.1300; the W end, with its neo-Norman windows, was rebuilt in 1893. Plain 12thc. windows in the nave S wall and above the N nave arcade, the latter once on the exterior of the church. The early fabric is of red sandstone rubble. Romanesque sculpture is found in the S doorway of the nave and in the N nave arcade; there is also a carved stone inset into the E nave wall to the R of the chancel arch.
  • 5. St Mary, Halford, Warwickshire, England
    N doorway.
    Parish church
    The church comprises a 12thc. nave, extended westward in the 13thc., and a 13thc. chancel and S aisle; the 13thc. W tower is formed in the angle of the nave and S aisle. There is extensive use of grey lias rubble work, also some shell bearing limestone and red sandstone. The N and S doorways are Romanesque, as is the chancel and sculpture in the nave E wall.
  • 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. Nativity of Blessed Virgin Mary, Studley, Warwickshire, England
    General view from SE.
    Parish church
    The present church consists of chancel, nave, S aisle and W tower. Surviving from the 12thc. are the N doorway, herringbone masonry in the N wall and a high-level round-headed lancet. Of possible 12thc. origin is a small carved panel reset above the N jamb of the chancel arch.
  • 8. 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.