Ruins Of Church Of All Saints is a Grade I listed building in the Ashfield local planning authority area, England. First listed on 13 October 1966. A Medieval Church.
Ruins Of Church Of All Saints
- WRENN ID
- muted-render-indigo
- Grade
- I
- Local Planning Authority
- Ashfield
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 13 October 1966
- Type
- Church
- Period
- Medieval
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The Ruins of the Church of All Saints is a Grade I listed parish church located in Annesley Park. It dates from the 12th to the 15th century and is constructed of coursed and squared rubble. The structure features a moulded plinth, string course, and a moulded eaves band. The windows are primarily unglazed broken openings. The church includes a west tower, nave, south aisle, and chancel.
The west tower is a single stage with coved eaves and remnants of a parapet, and the north-west corner has a canted stair turret. The west side displays a 13th-century cusped double lancet. On the north side of the nave, there are two large buttresses with string courses and the remains of three windows. The south aisle features a central buttress and two pairs of gabled corner buttresses. To the left, there is a chamfered 13th-century door, and to the right, the remains of three mid-14th-century ogee double lancets. The west end also has a similar double lancet, while the east end contains a broken opening.
The chancel, which has two bays, features a broken opening to the north and east, with the south side showcasing a central late 14th-century doorway flanked by the remains of square-headed double lancets. The tower arch is 13th-century, double chamfered and rebated, with octagonal imposts. The south aisle has a moulded sill band, and the east end contains a 13th-century piscina and integral sedilia with a hood mould and moulded shafts. The chancel archway has 14th-century octagonal moulded imposts, and the south side of the chancel includes a small 13th-century piscina.
This church was replaced by a new building in 1874 and subsequently fell into decay, with most monuments removed to the new church. The ruins were consolidated in 1985.
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