The Corpus of ROMANESQUE SCULPTURE in Britain & Ireland
Warwickshire (now)
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.
Parish church
A small church with plastered E Norman nave, and 13thc. chancel. The only Romanesque feature is the blocked N doorway, visible only on the outside.
Parish church
Of Hornton stone (Pevsner), with a 14thc. tower, an early 13thc. nave, N and S aisles and a transitional chancel arch (not included here). The 12thc. N and S doorways bear carved ornament.
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.
Parish church
Of Saxon origin and built of a Cotswold-type stone. Tower, aisled nave and chancel, the last rebuilt in the early 14thc. The nave upper walls have remnants of pre-Conquest windows and doors, completely blocked. The piers and responds of the nave arcades are basically 12thc.; the arches are pointed except for those at the W end, which are round-headed and terminate in a later W wall. Romanesque sculpture is also found in the doorway once in the N wall but now reset in the S.
Parish church
Mainly Victorian chancel and nave, Perpendicular W tower and late 12thc. S arcade. The arcade is of a cream Cotswold limestone.
Parish church
The original nave and chancel church is of c.1150 and has aisles of 1180, of which two bays survive in each. The church has been extended or adapted over time and now includes an extended chancel, vestry, N chapel, N and S aisles, S porch and W tower.
Parish church
Except for the blocked N nave doorway, which bears Romanesque sculpture, the church dates from the 13thc. onwards, with 19thc. transepts.
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.
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.