Please use this link to cite this page - https://www.crsbi.ac.uk/view-item?i=2727.
Find out how to cite the CRSBI website here.
The church comprises an aisled nave, apparently late 11thc. in origin, a 14thc. W tower, and a square-ended chancel with a plain arch and a vestry on its N side. It contains a plain font.
A church in Cocking was mentioned in the Domesday Survey. Cocking was held by Robert from Earl Roger.
Nairn and Pevsner date the font to the 12thc., and it is difficult to narrow it down any further. It is tempting, however, to place the plain tub and cup fonts of the county in the first three-quarters of the century, before the fashion for arcaded Sussex marble fonts took over. It is reasonable, however, to expect an overlap of the two types.
M. F. Drummond-Roberts, Some Sussex Fonts Photographed and Described, Brighton 1935, 25.
J. Morris and J. Mothersill (ed.), Domesday Book: Sussex, Chichester 1976, 11, 11.
I. Nairn and N. Pevsner, The Buildings of England: Sussex, Harmondsworth 1965, 192-93.
Victoria County History: Sussex 4 (Chichester Rape) 1953, 45-47, with plan.
A. K. Walker, An Introduction to the Study of English fonts with details of those in Sussex, London 1908, 118-19.