18 The Church of All Saints, Winter sloiv. 



angle. The archway opening into the tower is a bold one of a 

 single order of Perpendicular type.and the entire tower is probably 

 of the fifteenth century — a two-light original window remains in 

 the west of the belfry, and single lights in the north and south 

 sides. The north door has a four-centred arch ; the three-light 

 cusped west window is a post-Reformation one. 



The walls of the tower are without set-off or string-course from 

 the ground to the roof ; the latter is a pyramidal one, starting at 

 the level of the nave ridge. The whole building is built of flint, 

 and has no gable copings. 



The Church of All Saints, Wintekslow. 



Chancel, nave with north and south aisle of four bays each, and 

 tower forming the porch on the south. 



This Church was restored in 1851, until which time the nave 

 was probably only two bays in length ; the western half was 

 then added and much rebuilding of other parts of the Church 

 took place. 



The old part of the nave consists of an arcade of two bays on 

 each side ; the south arcade is early Norman work, having the 

 central pier cruciform on plan and the responds corresponding. 

 For capitals there is a simple impost moulding, and arches are semi- 

 circular, having wide inner order and shallow outer, both plain, 

 with square edges. The north arcade has a round pier and 

 responds, the east respond being a deep one, with a modern 

 opening cut through. The capitals have unusual mouldings, 

 probably of the thirteenth century. The arches are pointed, and 

 possess the same characteristic as those on the south, having a 

 broad inner order, but both orders here are chamfered. 



The chancel arch follows the north arcade type — there are no 

 labels to any of these arches. There are old windows at the west 

 ends of the aisles ; that of the south being a square-headed one of 



