72 The Churches of Bulford, Enford, and Fittleton. 
century, but the south side has been re-built, and is lighted by four 
two-light windows; these, with the east gable, are part of the work 
finished in 1831, but there were probably windows on this side 
before. 
The chancel arch indicates some advance in style, and may be 
assigned to the latter part of the 12th century; it is pointed and — 
supported on attached shafts with carved capitals of early type. 
The chancel portion of the Church possesses very remarkable 
features, which seem to indicate the use of it by a considerable 
number of clergy, and its connection with Chisenbury Priory. 
The chancel has a clear internal length of 31ft. 7in., and the whole 
of the north wall (excepting the spaces taken up by piscina and 
two doors) is occupied by sedilia arranged in a recessed arcade, and 
without windows; the sacrarium on this side has a triple arcade, 
in the easternmost bay of which is a recess which might have been © 
either a piscina or an aumbry, and seats on different levels exist in 
the other two. Westward of this is a priests’ door opening to the 
outside. This is a 14th century insertion, and the recess originally 
had a seat like the others, traces of it being discernible. Beyond 
this is a coeval door leading to the sacristy, contained within 
a bay of the arcade, and westward of it four wide bays of sedilia — 
on one level. This wall and group of features are of early 13th 
century work of a good type. The east wall was altered in the - 
14th century, when the diagonal buttresses were added, and the 
rather poor four-light window inserted. The south wall of the 
chancel was re-built in brickwork, probably during the latter half — 
of the 18th century, and has two semi-circular pseudo-classic 
windows. On the north of the chancel, and connected with it by 
a narrow passage lighted by a small lancet window, is a coeval © 
octagonal vestry of unique design. It is 9ft. 9in. internal diameter ; 
in each of the north, east, and west sides is a small lancet window ; 
and in each of the four canted sides is a recess—that in the south- 
east being a piscina with rebates as if intended for a shutter; those 
in north-east and north-west sides are aumbries, also with rebates, — 
and in the two former the iron hooks remain to which the folding 
shutters were hung. The south-west recess is a shallow sink or 
