History in Structure

Church of St George

A Grade I Listed Building in Stowlangtoft, Suffolk

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Coordinates

Latitude: 52.2771 / 52°16'37"N

Longitude: 0.8684 / 0°52'6"E

OS Eastings: 595782

OS Northings: 268202

OS Grid: TL957682

Mapcode National: GBR RG4.BC2

Mapcode Global: VHKD7.01G6

Plus Code: 9F427VG9+R9

Entry Name: Church of St George

Listing Date: 15 November 1954

Grade: I

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1182897

English Heritage Legacy ID: 281234

ID on this website: 101182897

Location: St George's Church, Stowlangtoft, Mid Suffolk, IP31

County: Suffolk

District: Mid Suffolk

Civil Parish: Stowlangtoft

Traditional County: Suffolk

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Suffolk

Church of England Parish: Stowlangtof with Langham

Church of England Diocese: St.Edmundsbury and Ipswich

Tagged with: Church building

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Description



TL 96 NE STOWLANGTOFT THE STREET

2/131 Church of St. George
15.11.54

GV I

Parish church, c.1370-1390 for, principally, Robert Dacey de Ashfield.
Restored 1855-6 by William White. Nave, chancel, west tower, south porch.
Flint and limestone rubble with freestone dressings. Flat roofs behind
parapets and parapet gables. Much chequerboard flushwork: in a frieze at the
base, on parapets and buttresses, and on the south face of the porch. On the
parapets over the porch is arcading filled with flushwork. A fine series of
grotesque gargoyles, and the base of a gable cross. Very tall and narrow 2-
light window to nave and chancel, broad east window with complex tracery.
Moulded porch doorway with shafts whose mouldings suggest reuse from an
earlier C14 building. Inner doorway with original plank door and ironmongery.
Interior: In the chancel is a shafted piscina and adjacent window seat
sedilia. A further piscina in the south nave wall. Arch-braced tiebeam
roofs: in the nave there are grotesque corbels beneath the wall-pieces of each
truss, and the square-set purlins are archbraced with corbels to the tiebeams.
Painted canopy of honour to the easternmost bay. Lower part of C15 rood
screen remains, with original paintwork to the framing: the tracery includes
carved figures. Roodloft staircase in north wall. Octagonal limestone font
with figures beneath arches on each face of the bowl, and fluted stem. Fine
C15 benches in the nave, incorporating clapboarded dado. Poppyhead bench-ends
with tracery below, and upon the buttresses stand a wide variety of carved
figures. Fine C15 choirstalls, with much high-quality carving including
traceried panels and figures standing on the bench-ends. The misericord seats
have complete figure carving beneath. Painting of St Christopher on north wall
of nave. C15 stained glass in heads of nave windows at west end. Monument to
Paul D'Ewes in chancel, by John Johnson of London, 1624: kneeling figure with
two wives, son and seven daughters. Monument to Sir Willoughby D'Ewes
(d.1685): an open pediment on twisted columns. Medieval slab in chancel floor
with indents for brass figures and shields. Brass inscription on north
chancel wall to Paul D'Ewes (1630). Several C16 and C18 floor slabs, some
with coats of arms. The church is of outstanding interest as a closely-dated
example of a single-phase late C14 building.


Listing NGR: TL9578268202

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