The Corpus of ROMANESQUE SCULPTURE in Britain & Ireland
Warwickshire (pre-1974 traditional (England and Wales))
Parish church
The church consists of a 12thc. nave and chancel and a 15thc. W tower with a Victorian timber top incorporating a pyramidal tiled roof. Surviving 12thc. features include two plain, round-headed lancets in the chancel (N and S walls) and one in the nave (N wall) as well as traces of what was originally a group of three round-headed windows in the E wall of the chancel. Only the outer jambs of this group is still discernable owing to the insertion of a larger, later window. There are also blocked doorways in the N and S walls of the nave. The jambs and arch of the original S doorway now form the W doorway to the tower. The font is also of the 12thc.
Parish church
A two aisled church with a late 14thc. tower. The chancel is basically 12thc., but the S windows have been replaced and two on the N side of the chancel have been blocked. There are remains of the upper part of a large round arch over a later window in the E wall of the S aisle. Romanesque sculpture survives on the doorway to the N aisle. There is a badly eroded font which could be 12thc. and is therefore included.
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
The church consists of nave, chancel, N and S aisles, S transept, S porch, N vestry and W tower. The tower and N aisle are Perp. whilst most other features are 19thc. and 20thc. The font is 12thc.
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
The church has N and S aisles, a heavily altered 12thc. chancel with plain round-headed windows, and a 15thc. W tower.
Romanesque sculpture is found in the blocked N chancel
doorway and S nave arcade.
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.