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The Great Britain Guide

Historic churches · South East England

Church of Our Lady

Free admission

Church of Our Lady — Grade I listed building-listed church in england-south-east, United Kingdom.

Snowdrops at Warnford (I) - geograph.org.uk - 4827073

Basher Eyre — CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons licence

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Typical visit
30 min–1 h
  • Free entry

About

Church of Our Lady is a Grade I listed building-listed church in england-south-east, United Kingdom, registered on the National Heritage List for England (NHLE entry 1296978). Listed status protects buildings and structures of special architectural or historic interest. See the linked Wikipedia article for further details.

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Heritage listing

Details SU 62 SW WARNFORD WARNFORD PARK 4/10 Church of Our Lady 6.3.67 (formerly listed as The Church) I Parish church. Of Saxon origin, Norman west tower of c1130, Early English single- cell nave and chancel of c1190, Decorated east window of 1377, minor restorations of 1906. Walls of flint with stone dressings, north, east and part of south walls cement rendered, tower of stone but mainly cement rendered. Tile roof. The massive square tower has three stages, flat corner buttresses, roundel openings at the top, narrow central windows to each stage, and a C18 brick parapet with stone coping. The nave has a regular series of lancets at each side and the east window is a fine example of Curvilinear tracery: some later buttresses have been added. Early English south porch (a former north porch now missing). The interior is a fine open hall, with a roof of 1906 (retaining some old tie-beams). On the north side there is the entry to a rood stair, in the centre, at the rear, is a Purbeck font (c1130) on a drum with four corner columns. The oak panelling (of C17 & C18) which formerly enclosed the squire's pew is re-used as a background to a C17 altar table, at the west end. There is a screen of 1634 within the tower arch, supporting a Victorian Gothic retable panel, containing the Prescriptions. There is a fine screen between nave and chancel of 1634, with interlaced arcading on balusters above a panelled base: the altar rails are late C17. Dado panelling in the chancel seems to be the remains of a medieval screen: there are old bench ends in the nave: Jacobean pulpit. On the north wall of the nave are two hatchments and a Royal Coat of Arms of G.IV(1821). Against the east wall are set two fine altar tombs, on the north side of William Neale (d.1601) and at the south side a mo

From the Historic England List Entry under OGL v3.

Place summary

The Church of Our Lady is a Grade I listed church located in South-East England. This designation highlights its exceptional architectural and historic significance.

AI-generated from the structured facts on this page (operator, designation, listing, era). Not a substitute for visiting.

Coordinates
51.0000, -1.1142
County
Hampshire
District
Winchester
Parish
Warnford
Postcode
SO32 3LB
Parliamentary constituency
Winchester
Established
1050

Sources

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Frequently asked questions

Where is Church of Our Lady?
Church of Our Lady is in Hampshire, South-East England, United Kingdom (postcode SO32 3LB), in the parish of Warnford.
Is Church of Our Lady a listed building?
Church of Our Lady is officially recognised as Grade I listed building listed.
Is Church of Our Lady free to visit?
Yes, Church of Our Lady is free to enter.
How do I get to Church of Our Lady?
Drivers can navigate to postcode SO32 3LB. It sits within the Winchester parliamentary constituency.