The Corpus of ROMANESQUE SCULPTURE in Britain & Ireland
Sussex (pre-1974 traditional (England and Wales))
Parish church
The church has a W tower, a large 13thc. nave with no clerestorey, a transept and no chancel.
Parish church
The church has a W tower, an aisled nave with opposing N and S porches,
a High Victorian chancel arch, and large square
chancel with neo-Norman organ recess on N side. One
Norman window survives, above the N arcade.
Parish church
The church comprises a continuous chancel and
nave, a N transept with an E aisle, a S transept (originally a separate chapel)
with an E chapel and S porch, and a W tower capped by
a 14thc. `Rhenish Helm'. The tower was erected in three 11thc. campaigns: the
lower stage is pre-Conquest, the first and second storeysc.1066-80 and the
third storeyc.1080-1100. A N doorway demonstrates that vestiges of the
nave belong to the first half of the 12thc., but the transepts and
chancel were erected after 1154, when the church was
acquired by the Templars. The church underwent extensive restorations in 1853,
when most of the internal masonry was scraped under R.C. Carpenter. The
interior contains a number of fragments ascribed to the 11thc., and a plain
12thc. font.
Parish church
Southease church has a circular W tower with a shingle spire, a nave with a blocked 12thc. window on the N side, a S porch, and a chancel with a blocked S arch. The nave is separated from the chancel by a half-timbered wall with a wide arch.
Parish church
The church is largely 19thc. and comprises a W tower, a nave with N and
S aisles, a chancel flanked by a vestry (N) and chapel (S). When the church was substantially
rebuilt in 1878, the nave arcades were retained.
Parish church
A new parish church was erected on a new site in 1864-66, incorporating
the nave arcades of the old church. The 13thc. chancel
of the old church ('St Wilfrid's Chapel'), located at Church Norton, was left
standing.
Parish church
The church appears to date from the 13thc. The aisleless nave has
opposing doorways and is contiguous with the chancel,
without an arch. There is a S porch and N
vestry.
Parish church
Heavily restored in the 1860s by Woodyer, the church has a single nave
with opposing N and S doorways, and a large chancel.
There is a bell turret with a broach spire over the W
gable.
Parish church
This is a small, 13thc. church, comprising an aisled nave with a bell-turret over the western bay, and a square-ended chancel. The only evidence for earlier fabric is the depressed chancel arch, but there is a plain tub font that may be Romanesque.
Parish church
Binsted church has a single nave, with a bell turret at the W end, opposing N and S doorways and one blocked Norman window (N side). The chancel is not separated from the nave by an arch, and has Norman windows on both N and S sides.