The Corpus of ROMANESQUE SCULPTURE in Britain & Ireland
Warwickshire (pre-1974 traditional (England and Wales))
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.
Parish church
Built of local red sandstone, the church consists of an ashlar chancel, nave, 12thc. rubble-work W tower, and N and S aisles. The tower has one round-headed window with a plain, restored lintel. The S arcade to the nave and the font are 12thc. The S aisle itself is said to be 13thc. The S wall of the nave was raised to allow the clerestory windows to be inserted (church guide).
Parish church
The font is the only Romanesque feature. The present church dates fromc.1340 (Pevsner suggestsc.1385), although drastically restored 1868-9.
Parish church
A small church with an early 12thc. nave, a later 12thc. N aisle and a chancel ofc.1300; the W end, with its neo-Norman windows, was rebuilt in 1893. Plain 12thc. windows in the nave S wall and above the N nave arcade, the latter once on the exterior of the church. The early fabric is of red sandstone rubble. Romanesque sculpture is found in the S doorway of the nave and in the N nave arcade; there is also a carved stone inset into the E nave wall to the R of the chancel arch.
Parish church
The church consists of a chancel which is Romanesque in origin, nave, N aisle, a 17thc. W tower, and a vestry which abuts the N wall. 12thc. work is found in the chancel arch, which was re-built during the 1950s owing to mining subsidence, a priest's door and two lancets with arcuated lintels, in the chancel. There is also a vestige of buttressing on the SE angle of the chancel, at low level.
Parish church
Aisleless church with chancel, nave, S porch, vestry and 15thc. W tower. Both nave and chancel are pre-1100 (Pevsner) and are probably of 1080 (Church Guide). Sculpture is found on the N and S doorways to the nave, N and S chancel windows and the recut font. A number of later windows have been inserted and there are many alterations ofc.1800, in red brick. The original nave and chancel are of local red sandstone, and the tower of grey sandstone.
Parish church
An originally 12thc. church consisting of chancel, narrow nave, W tower with clasping buttresses and nave S aisle. The S aisle was added in the late 12thc., the arcades formed by cutting through the S wall leaving rectangular piers. The S wall of the aisle has since been rebuilt. Surviving 12thc. features are the N doorway, three bays of the nave S arcade, and the lower part of the W wall of the tower which incorporates two round-headed windows, one of which is decorated.