Church of St Mary Ardley, England

Listed Building Data

Church of St Mary has been designated a Grade II* 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shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.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
1046881
Listing Type
listed building
Grade
II*
Date Listed
7 December 1966
Name
CHURCH OF ST MARY
Location
CHURCH OF ST MARY, SOMERTON ROAD
Parish
Ardley
District
Cherwell
County
Oxfordshire
Grid Reference
SP 54242 27371
Easting
454242.0000
Northing
227371.0000

Listed Building Description

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

ARDLEY SOMERTON ROAD SP52NW (North side) 3/3 Church of St. Mary 07/12/66 GV II*

Church. C14 (possibly partly earlier) and 1792, restored 1865. Limestone and some marlstone rubble with limestone-ashlar dressings; limestone ashlar; Stonesfield-slate roofs. Chancel, nave and west tower. C14 rubble chancel has good flowing tracery in the 3-light east window and in the 2-light windows to west of it; the 2 westernmost windows are square headed but may be of the same date, that to south with a blocked lower section below a transom. C14 priest's door. Plain ashlar nave of 1792 has 3 simple pointed windows each side, the middle window to south blocked. The saddleback-roofed tower, which has c14 diagonal buttresses and marlstone banding to its lower stages, has a pointed western doorway of c.1792 below a square-headed 2-light C14 window. The limestone rubble of the upper stage looks earlier and there are simple 2-light openings to the top stage facing north and south, which may be Romanesque. Interior: Chancel has an unusual C13 double recess, one half of which is a piscina; it has linked trefoiled heads with a central piercing, and the jambs are ornamented with dogtooth. To north is an elaborately-cusped ogee-headed C14 tomb recess. The plain chancel arch has C13 detached shafts with moulded capitals, but the northern base may be earlier, The tower arch is probably C14 but is partly concealed by a western gallery of 1834. Fittings include a C12 tub font and two C17 chests, There is a wall monument of 1753 in the chancel, and several plainer tablets. (VCH: Oxfordshire, Vol VI, p13; Buildings of England; Oxfordshire, pp422-3)

Listing NGR: SP5424227371