1 In 1776 Stukeley saw a chapel converted into a barn.
2 A chapel was established by the ancestors of Sir William de Waver, who made a complaint to Pope Honorius ...
The possible site of a Medieval chapel is suggested by documentary evidence. The site is located 1km north west of Churchover.
1 There was a chapel at Bretford unconnected with the nunnery of which a list of the incumbents from 1303-1360 exists. The site is now lost.
2 Founded in 12th century ...
Documentary evidence suggests that a Medieval chapel existed in Bretford. It had originally been built as a leper hospital. The exact location of the site is unknown.
1 Chancel, nave, N and S aisles, N chancel aisle, W tower and vestry. Almost entirely rebuilt late in the 14th century and the tower added probably early in the ...
The Church of St Peter which was originally built during the Medieval period. The church was largely restored during the Imperial period. It is situated in Vicarage Lane, Dunchurch.
1 Built 1876. Red brick with yellow brick dressings. Front has a central arched doorway flanked by two narrow arched windows andwith a rose window above. Disused.
A Methodist chapel that was built during the Imperial period. The chapel is no longer in use but it is situated on Daventry Road, Dunchurch.
1 Chancel with modern N vestry, aisleless nave with a W bell-cote, and a modern S porch. The nave is C12, the chancel is late C13 addition, and ...
The parish church of St. Bartholomew which has its origins in the Medieval period. It is situated 600m north east of Park Farm.
1 There is a red brick modern church at the above location which was built in 1935.
2 The church is in use and is well-maintained.
A Methodist church that was built during the 1930s. It is still in use and is situated on Rugby Road, Dunchurch
1 Wesleyan Chapel built in 1862.
2 The chapel has recently been converted into a private house and modernised.
A Wesleyan Chapel which was built during the Imperial period. It is now in use as a private house. The chapel is situated in North Road, Clifton upon Dunsmore.
1 A chapel at Newton is recorded in 1535; its site is mentioned in 1616. The rectory or tithes of this were valued in 1535 to 7.6s.8d. The tithes were ...
The site of a Medieval chapel is suggested by documentary evidence. The exact location of the chapel is not known but it was situated somewhere in the area of Newton.
1 Of brick with a slate roof and a porch. United Reformed Church.
A Congregational Chapel which was built during the Imperial period. It is situated in Newton.
1 Built of brick with a tile roof. Early 20th century.
The Church of the Good Shepherd, a chapel that was built towards the end of the Imperial period. It is situated at the south end of Newton.
1 The old church of St Mary (PRN 986) consists of a chancel only, fitted up as a chapel, about 8.2m by 5m and is of late 13th century date. ...
The New Chapel of St Mary dating to the Imperial period. It is located 900m east of Ullenhall.
1 Chancel, nave with clearstorey, N and S aisles, N porch and W tower. 1826 by T Rickman, with E end remodelled in 1858 by Sir Gilbert Scott, who provided ...
The Church of St Peter was built during the Imperial period near the site of the original Medieval church. It is an early example of the Gothic Revivial movement and it stands in Sherbourne.
1 Description: Medieval church, consisting of chancel with S chapel, nave and probably a W tower. Nave and tower rebuilt 1747. The remainder, apparently of 14th century date, ...
The site of the old Church of All Saints which was originally built in the Medieval period. The nave and tower were rebuilt in 1747. It was finally demolished around 1867 when the present church was built. It stood in Sherbourne.
1 12th century chancel and south wall of nave. Remainder of nave and N aisle late 13th century. 15th century W tower. 18th century S porch. Restored 18th century and ...
The church of St. John the Baptist, originally built during the Medieval period with later additions. It is situated in the village of Middleton.
1 Chancel, nave with W bellcote, N and S aisles and N vestry. There was a chapel in Combrook which was consecrated between 1125 and 1150. In 1853 Combrook was ...
The site of The Church of St Mary and St Margaret, a Medieval chapel which was largely rebuilt as a parish church in the 19th century. The chancel was rebuilt in 1831 and the nave in 1866. It stands in Combrook.
1 A priest is recorded at Middleton in 1086. A chamber with a Norman window is sometimes identified as a chapel, but was probably actually a hall (PRN 117). A ...
An oratory, a private chapel in a house. It is Medieval in date and is located in Middleton Hall.
1 Chancel with N organ chamber and vestry, nave with N and S trancepts and N aisle, and W tower. The W tower is said to date from 1315, but ...
The Church of St Peter was originally built during the Medieval period and the tower dates to this period. The church was partly rebuilt by Sanderson Miller in 1755, and again during the 1800s. It stands in Kineton.
1, 2 The western part of the building known as Old Chapel Cottage was a 19th-century chapel provided by the Quakers for use by any denomination. It was used on ...
The western part of the building known as Old Chapel Cottage was a 19th-century chapel provided by the Quakers for use by any denomination. It was used on alternate Sundays by Methodists and Anglicans until the mid-late 20th century.
1 An 18th century brick built vault revealed after collapse at SP28128717 (see EWA9019), probably as the result of inserting marble monuments and associated cremation urns. Vault measured 2.44 ...
The churchyard of St Mary and All Saints Church, Fillongley
1 Chancel, nave and W tower. A fine example of the mid 12th century, but has suffered alterations of a peculiar nature. It preserves most of the original chancel walls, ...
The Church of St Nicholas which was originally built during the Medieval period. It is situated 300m south east of the police station, Henley in Arden.
1 Whilst working on the chancel reflooring in June 1965, a vault was exposed on the south side. It was roughly 7’6″ square with a brick division forming two ...
A vault was found under the Church of St Nicholas during the reflooring of the chancel. The vault dates back to at least the Imperial period. Four coffins were found inside the vault, only two of which appear to have been used.
1 Description: Undivided chancel and nave, with N aisle and vestry, tower W of the aisle and porch W of the nave. The main body of the church is ...
The Parish Church of St John the Baptist which was originally built during the Medieval period. It is situated 100m south of the Henley-in-Arden Village Cross.
1 Consisted of chancel, nave with N aisle, N and S transepts and W tower. The chancel, nave and tower, and probably the transepts, are all part of the church ...
The ruins of the Church of Holy Trinity/St Nicholas, Lower Ettington. Built in the Medieval period (13th Century), this church was superseded in 1798 by a better located church (in Upper Ettington). These ruins are situated in Ettington Park.
1 Built in 1798 and demolished, except for the tower, in 1913. A stone in the graveyard marks the site of the Shirley transept, 1800-1913. Had the reputation of being ...
The Church of St Thomas a Becket which was built during the Imperial period. Everything but the tower was demolished in 1913. The tower has now been converted into a dwelling. The church was located on the north west edge of Ettington, on Banbury Road.