Details
SP42NE NORTH ASTON
5/270 Church of St. Mary
08/12/55 GV II*
Church. C14 and C15; restored and enlarged c.1866 by Sir G.G. Scott. Limestone
rubble with marlstone- and limestone-ashlar dressings; lead and concrete
plain-tile roofs. Chancel, south-east chapel, north-east vestry, nave, north and
south aisles, south porch and west tower. Chancel retains a 2-light traceried
C14 window to south but the corresponding window to north is C19 as is the
rebuilt east wall and 3-light window. South chapel, extending the aisle
eastwards, has two 3-light early-C14 windows with cusped intersecting tracery,
but its 3-light east window has a casement moulding and Perpendicular tracery.
The plain ashlar parapet is probably also C15 and is continued on the aisle at a
lower level. 2-light window to right of porch, lancet to left, and the south
door with continuous mouldings and head stops are C14. Porch is probably mostly
C19 and has an entrance arch of 2 chamfered orders. North aisle has similar
windows plus a simple chamfered arched door. Steep-roofed C19 vestry, to east,
has two 2-light windows, possibly incorporating some medieval work, and the
3-light east window is C15 and similar to that on the south chapel. C15/C16
clerestory has 2-light square-headed windows. Slender late-C15 tower, with a
crenellated parapet and crocketed pinnacles, is in 3 stages above a high moulded
plinth and has diminutive diagonal buttresses; the top stage has transomed
2-light traceried openings and on the south is a niche containing a seated
figure above a shield. The 3-light Perpendicular-style west window is probably
C19. Interior: chancel has a small C14 piscina, and has 2-bay arcades to north
and south, the latter incorporating a C15 arch, the remainder C19 as is the
chancel arch. 2-bay nave arcades of 2 chamfered orders with octagonal columns
and moulded capitals are C14, but the tall tower arch, breaking forward into the
nave, is C15. Arch leading to south chapel from aisle is contemporary with the
arcade, and the chapel has a C14 piscina. Chapel roof, with moulded cambered
tiebeams and purlins is C15; other roofs are C19, the nave with traceried
trusses, and with cusped bracing rising from elaborate wall posts and also
supporting the ridge beam. Elaborate oak fittings are all C19 and include return
choir stalls, a traceried rood screen, and bench pews with blind-traceried ends.
Circular panelled font is probably C17 but may be earlier. Fine C15 alabaster
monument in south chapel has 2 recumbent figures on a panelled chest carved with
monks holding staves and rosaries. C19 stained glass in chancel windows;
fragments of C15 glass in tracery lights of chapel.
(Buildings of England: Oxfordshire: p718; VCH: Oxfordshire: Vol XI, pp18-19)
Listing NGR: SP4805028894
Legacy
The contents of this record have been generated from a legacy data system.
Legacy System number:
243997
Legacy System:
LBS
Sources
Books and journals Pevsner, N, Sherwood, J, The Buildings of England: Oxfordshire, (1974), 718 Salzman, L F, The Victoria History of the County of Oxford, (1983), 18-19
Legal
This building is listed under the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 as amended for its special architectural or historic interest.
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