History in Structure

Church of St Philip

A Grade II* Listed Building in Rollright, Oxfordshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.9688 / 51°58'7"N

Longitude: -1.5741 / 1°34'26"W

OS Eastings: 429353

OS Northings: 230125

OS Grid: SP293301

Mapcode National: GBR 5R0.JV0

Mapcode Global: VHBZ1.NSP2

Plus Code: 9C3WXC9G+G8

Entry Name: Church of St Philip

Listing Date: 27 August 1957

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1251364

English Heritage Legacy ID: 434037

ID on this website: 101251364

Location: St Philip's Church, Little Rollright, West Oxfordshire, OX7

County: Oxfordshire

District: West Oxfordshire

Civil Parish: Rollright

Traditional County: Oxfordshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Oxfordshire

Church of England Parish: Little Compton, Chastleton, Cornwell, Little Rollright and Salford

Church of England Diocese: Oxford

Tagged with: Church building

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Description


ROLLRIGHT LITTLE ROLLRIGHT
SP23SE
1/139 Church of St. Philip
27/08/57

GV II*

Church. Chancel probably early C13, altered C15; nave C16; tower built (or
rebuilt) 1617 for William Blower. Limestone ashlar, coursed squared marlstone
with limestone-ashiar dressings, and some render; concrete plain-tile roofs.
Chancel, nave, west tower and south porch. Rendered chancel retains shallow C13
buttresses but has fine 3-light C15 windows to south, with 4-centre-arched
heads, Perpendicular drop tracery and scrolled hood stops; a further 3-light
window to east has lozenge stops and is set within a casement moulding. Ashlar
south wall of nave has a wide square-headed 5-light window with arched lights,
hollow-chamfered mullions and recessed spandrels; the label mould has lozenge
stops. The south doorway and the entrance to the small porch have shallow
chamfered Tudor arches. Marlstone tower, with stepped diagonal buttresses and a
crenellated parapet with small corner pinnacles, has a west window of 2 arched
hollow-chamfered lights below a label and has similar bell-chamber openings; a
wall tablet, framed by Ionic columns, has a shield of arms, the date 1617 and
the inscription "WILLIAM BLO(?)/ESQVIER LORD OF/THIS MANOR BV/(?) THIS TOWER".
Interior: both splays of the east window have moulded image brackets on tall
pedestals and elaborate crocketed canopies. Early-C13 chancel arch of 2
chamfered orders has impost-capitals returning as strings. Wide chamfered tower
arch may be earlier than 1617. Simple roofs are C18/early C19. Above the tower
arch are traces of wall paintings. Fittings include late-C17 barleytwist
communion rails, a small font on a tall panelled stem (probably C17) and a C19
stone pulpit. 2 large canopied monuments in the chancel commemorate members of
the Dixon family. The earlier (probably early C17) is in painted stone with
Ionic columns, obelisks, an achievement of arms and strapwork enclosing a vase
of flowers and an hour glass on a skull; the full-length recumbent effigy is in
armour. The monument to Edward Dixon and his 2 wives (c.1650) is in alabaster
and black marble, and has the 3 figures kneeling around a prayer desk in a
recess flanked by black Corinthian columns; the front panel is incised with the
kneeling figures of 10 children.
(Buildings of England: Oxfordshire: p690)


Listing NGR: SP2935330125

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