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Church of St John the Baptist

A Grade I Listed Building in Badingham, Suffolk

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Coordinates

Latitude: 52.2647 / 52°15'52"N

Longitude: 1.3775 / 1°22'38"E

OS Eastings: 630564

OS Northings: 268318

OS Grid: TM305683

Mapcode National: GBR WN4.T8Z

Mapcode Global: VHL9Y.TBKR

Plus Code: 9F43797G+VX

Entry Name: Church of St John the Baptist

Listing Date: 7 December 1966

Grade: I

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1030808

English Heritage Legacy ID: 285246

ID on this website: 101030808

Location: St John the Baptist's Church, Badingham, East Suffolk, IP13

County: Suffolk

District: East Suffolk

Civil Parish: Badingham

Built-Up Area: Badingham

Traditional County: Suffolk

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Suffolk

Church of England Parish: Badingham St John the Baptist

Church of England Diocese: St.Edmundsbury and Ipswich

Tagged with: Church building

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Description


TM 36 NW BADINGHAM LOW STREET

4/8 Church of St. John the
- Baptist
7.12.66

- I


Parish church. Medieval; chancel considerably restored 1879. Nave, chancel,
west tower, south porch, north vestry; the church is aligned southwest -
northeast. Random flint and stone rubble, with some coursed work to the tower
and nave; red brick to upper part of nave; south chancel faced with large
knapped flints; remains of plaster to nave and north chancel; stone dressings;
leaded roof to nave, plaintiles to chancel. 2-stage tower, probably largely
C12-C13; about half way up on the west and south faces are C12 slit windows;
2-light Y tracery bell chamber openings, crenellated parapet. The C12 west
angles of the nave have nook-shafts: they now form small buttresses to the
tower. North and south nave each with a single Cl3 lancet window and one
early C16 2-light brick window at clerestory level, the remaining windows
mostly C15 but restored. Fine porch: c.1480; knapped flint with panelled
flushwork to facade and enriched plinth; moulded entrance arch with carved
spandrels and empty canopied niche above; crenellated parapet. Original door
into nave. 2-bay chancel, much restored 1879, the windows and Priest's
doorway in Decorated style. Wide tower arch with C12 nook-shafts. North nave
with diagonally-set canopied image niche. Very fine 8-bay single hammerbeam
nave roof: richly decorated wallplate, pierced tracery above the hammerbeams
and the collars, east-west arched bracing between the wallposts and along the
roof ridge; the angels against the ends of the hammerbeams are replacements of
c.1900. Late C19 4-bay arched-braced chancel roof. Very fine late C15 carved
octagonal font, the faces of the bowl depicting the Seven Sacraments and the
Baptism of Christ; good mid C17 pulpit complete with tester; 5 simple C15
poppyhead bench ends in nave. The traceried dado of the rood screen now forms
part of the stalls. Early C19 framed copies of the Lord's Prayer, Creed and
Commandments in base of tower. Fine altar tomb in north west chancel,
probably of Sir John Carbonell (d.1423): tall recess with carved tomb chest
(partly obscured by benches); above is cresting with 8 blank shields and 3
carved helmets; to either side are wall shafts with broad brackets. In north
east chancel is the tomb of William Cotton (d.1616) and his wife: a large
standing monument with painted recumbent effigies and 2 kneeling children
below; the tomb displays elaborate heraldry of the Cotton and Rous families.
Graded I for surviving medieval fabric.


Listing NGR: TM3056468318

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