History in Structure

Church of All Saints

A Grade II* Listed Building in Middleton Stoney, Oxfordshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.9053 / 51°54'19"N

Longitude: -1.2294 / 1°13'45"W

OS Eastings: 453108

OS Northings: 223252

OS Grid: SP531232

Mapcode National: GBR 8X7.G0P

Mapcode Global: VHCX2.MCXR

Plus Code: 9C3WWQ4C+46

Entry Name: Church of All Saints

Listing Date: 7 December 1966

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1276839

English Heritage Legacy ID: 408301

ID on this website: 101276839

Location: All Saints' Church, Middleton Stoney, Cherwell, Oxfordshire, OX25

County: Oxfordshire

District: Cherwell

Civil Parish: Middleton Stoney

Traditional County: Oxfordshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Oxfordshire

Church of England Parish: Middleton Stoney

Church of England Diocese: Oxford

Tagged with: Church building

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Description


SP52SW MIDDLETON STONEY

5/109 Church of All Saints
07/12/66

GV II*


Church. Mid C12, late C12, early C13, C14 and C15; restored and partly rebuilt
1858 by S.S. Teulon and 1868 by G.E. Street. Limestone rubble with ashlar
dressings; Stonesfield-slate and sheet-metal roofs. Chancel, aisled nave, south
porch, west tower, south-east vestry and north-east mausoleum. Mid C12 slated
chancel has a string course, ornamented with dogtooth, and retains a
round-headed lancet to north; to south is a 3-light Decorated window, and to
east a 5-light window with tracery by Teulon in a C14 opening with head stops to
the hood. Vestry, extending south aisle to east, is by Street. South aisle, with
a deep moulded parapet, has 2 square-headed 3-light windows (one a restoration).
The large porch with a similar parapet has a late-C12 entrance arch with engaged
shafts carrying a heavy roll moulding; the large plank door is ancient, and the
porch shelters a fine mid C12 doorway, richly ornamented with chevron and with a
carved tympanum. Rebuilt north aisle has a re-used late C12 doorway with engaged
shafts and early stiff-leaf capitals. It extends eastwards to the Jersey
Mausoleum of 1805, built as a transept with a tall gable flanked by
diagonally-set pinnacles; the north window was "Normanised" by Teulon with plate
tracery. C15 clerestory has square-headed, 2-light, traceried windows. West
tower was rebuilt by Teulon retaining lancets at the third stage and the
early-C13 arcaded fourth stage incorporating bell-chamber openings; lower 2
stages have clasping buttresses. Interior: chancel is internally C19 with an
elaborate stone, marble and tile reredos plus a traceried double piscina;
arch-braced C19 roof has pierced cusping. A C19 chevron-ornamented archway on
the north leads to the Jersey Mausoleum. Pointed Transitional chancel arch has
clustered responds with leaf capitals, and the arch has a dogtooth band between
2 wide rolls. 3-bay north arcade is of similar date and style, with circular
columns, square capitals and a variety of leaf ornament. South aisle has a 2-bay
C14 arcade, with an octagonal column and moulded capital, plus an unmoulded
pointed arch to east. Tower arch is probably mostly C19. Arcaded oak chancel
furnishings plus low stone screen and pulpit are by Street. C14 octagonal font,
carved with window tracery and considerably cut down, stands on an octagonal
stem carved with a long inscription beginning "THIS FONTE CAME/FROM THE
KINGS/CHAPEL IN ISLIPP..." and claiming that Edward the Confessor was baptised
in it. Monuments in the chancel include 2 Baroque cartouches commemorating
members of the Offley family, and a brass to Elizabeth Harman (died 1607). The
Jersey Mausoleum contains elaborate late-C18 and C19 marble memorials, and has
painted heraldry on the walls and ceiling plus a patterned marble floor.
(V.C.H.; Oxfordshire, Vol.VI, pp.248-50; Buildings of England; Oxfordshire,
pp.701-2).


Listing NGR: SP5310823252

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