
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.