
The Corpus of ROMANESQUE SCULPTURE in Britain & Ireland

St Katherine (medieval)
Parish church
Teversal is a small village 3 miles W of Mansfield. The church lies to the W of the village and consists of a chancel, a nave with N and S aisles, and a W tower. Most of the fabric dates to the 13thc and later. The only Romanesque feature is the reset S nave doorway.
Parish church
The church of All Saints stands at the N end of the scattered linear village of Catherington in SE Hampshire, close to the Sussex border. The chancel and nave form a continuous vessel, without a chancel arch or screen. An addition on the S side of the chancel was built in 1883 as a vestry and organ chamber. The N side of the chancel is occupied by the large Hyde Chapel. The nave is aisled to N and S, with a SW tower positioned at the W end of the S aisle. There are doorways at the W end of the nave and in the S aisle; a N doorway has been blocked.
Parish church
Barmby Moor is a village about 1.5 miles W of Pocklington and 11 miles E of York. The present church consists of an undivided chancel and nave, with a N vestry and a S porch; the W tower is medieval. Inside, there is a Minton tile pavement in the chancel (Pevsner and Neave 1995, 271-2). The screens and wooden furnishings are largely by Ronald Sims; the additions in the chancel largely obscure the tiles. Except for the tower, the medieval church was entirely rebuilt in 1850-2 (Borthwick Vic. Ret., for 1865). The architect was Robert Dennis Chantrell, who also designed much of the glass. No faculty papers, for either the 1850-2 rebuilding or the reordering of the interior between 1980 and 2001, were found at the Borthwick Institute. To the E of the churchyard is the site of a moated manor house (now Barmby Manor).
The only remains of Romanesque sculpture are the voussoirs reset as part of the doorway to the basement boiler room.
Parish church
The village of Littleton is located to the NW of Winchester. The church is faced in flint with stone dressings and has red tile roofs. It comprises a chancel, nave, W gallery, N aisle and S porch. There are twinned bell openings in the W gable. The vestry occupies the E bay of the N aisle, alongside the chancel. Although the church is thought to have Anglo-Saxon origins, it does not retain fabric from before c.1200. The earliest elements are the Purbeck marble font and the jambs of the largely rebuilt chancel arch, which have roll mouldings.