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St Botolph, Botolphs, Sussex

Location
(50°52′18″N, 0°18′21″W)
Botolphs
TQ 193 094
pre-1974 traditional (England and Wales) Sussex
now West Sussex
  • Kathryn Morrison

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Feature Sets
Description

This is a small flint church with a W tower, a long nave with a blocked 13thc. N arcade, and a square chancel. A Norman window survives in the S side of the nave. The chancel arch is probably late Anglo-Saxon rather than early Norman, but is included in the Corpus on account of its stylistic relationship with Sompting (qv).

History

Botolphs is not mentioned in 1086, but the church is probably that mentioned under Annington. It has also been equated with the church of St Peter de Veteri Ponte (St Peter of Old Bridge), handed over to St Florent de Saumur together with Beeding Priory and St Nicholas, Bramber,c.1080, by William de Braose. It passed to Sele Priory by 1100 and a priest is recordedc.1150.

Features

Interior Features

Arches

Chancel arch/Apse arches
Comments/Opinions

Bibliography
Victoria County History: Sussex. VI, Pt 1 (Bramber Rape - S Part), 1980, 199.
J. Morris and J. Mothersill (ed.), Domesday Book: Sussex. Chichester 1976, 13.8.
E. A. Fisher, The Saxon Churches of Sussex. Newton Abbot. 1970, 61–67.