Church of St Anne Lewes, England

Listed Building Data

Church of St Anne has been designated a Grade I listed building in England with the following information, which has been imported from the National Heritage List for England. Please note that not all available data may be shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.

List Entry ID
1043687
Listing Type
listed building
Grade
I
Date Listed
25 February 1952
Name
CHURCH OF ST ANNE
Location
CHURCH OF ST ANNE, WESTERN ROAD
Parish
Lewes
District
Lewes
County
East Sussex
Grid Reference
TQ 40935 10005
Easting
540934.9750
Northing
110004.9788

Listed Building Description

Text courtesy of Historic England. © Crown Copyright, reprinted under the Open Government License.

TQ 4010 SE & TQ 4009 NE LEWES WESTERN ROAD 8/489 & 13/489 (south side)

25.2.52 Church of St Anne

GV I

Church. Early C12, late C12, C15, restored in 1889. Flint with stone quoins and dressings, some of the flint coursed. Horsham slab roofs with some replacement plain tiles. West tower, nave with south aisle and south chapel, chancel. West tower of three stages separated by string-courses. Short spire on pyramidal roof. Five-bay nave north wall with north porch, on which has been reset the former C12 doorway. Triple-ordered arch with pair of columns with cushion capitals and some chevron-moulding of arch. Simple staff-moulded lancets to north wall, all 1889, as throughout the church. Three-bay south wall, that to the east of the vestry. Cross-gabled chapel to the west with paired C15-type windows in square surround. Chancel of three windows to north and two to south. Separated triple lancet at east end. Interior: Two-bay aisle to south with vestry to west and chapel to east. Arcade of late C12 on drum piers with square abaci. Stiff-leaf capitals with stiff-leaf corbels at the corners. Pointed arches with chamfers except round-arched easternmost bay, showing existence of earlier C12 transetal chapel. Chapel with quadripartite rib-vault and boss of similar carving to capitals of south arcade and possibly of similar date. Nave roof of queen posts and curved queen struts, dated 1538. Font: C12, drum-shaped with basket-weave decoration, band of plait below and pellet above. Glass: south transept by Capronnier of Brussels, 1889. Pulpit: 1620, on angle columns with panels of lions' heads.

W.H. Godfrey, Lewes Guide, Lewes, 1933, (revised ed. 1977), 37-38. B.O.E., Sussex, Harmondsworth, 1965, 551-552.

Listing NGR: TQ4093710006