From the Romans to the Saxons to the Normans & the Medieval
Welcome Time Traveller
The 15th Century South Porch
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Let's travel on through time...
The 12th Century 'Aylesbury Font'
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The Church within a Church
The 10th Century Nave, the still-standing Anglo-Saxon Church,
embraced within a Norman and later 13th Century exterior.
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Evidence of earlier occupation
4th century Roman bricks in the chancel arch.
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When you enter the south porch of the church, beneath oak timbers hewn before Columbus set sail for the New World, you sense immediately this is an ancient place. The porch itself is 15th century, but when you step into the south aisle, you have travelled back in time 300 years. Here you would stand in a Norman and later 13th century extension to the original church, a Norman 'Aylesbury Font' standing prominently to the left. When you step into the Nave, the central part of the church, you have journeyed back in time over 1000 years, and find you are standing in the original Anglo-Saxon church, built around the year 975AD - quite literally a 'church within a church'. Were you to examine the chancel arch closely, you would discover 4th century red Roman bricks, evidence of earlier occupation on this site.