Church of St Mary the Virgin | |
Location: | Norton Sub Hamdon, Somerset, England |
Coordinates: | |
Built: | 16th century |
Listed Building – Grade I | |
Designated: | 19 April 1961[1] |
Reference #: | 437126 |
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The Church of St Mary the Virgin in Norton Sub Hamdon, Somerset, England has 13th century origins but was rebuilt around 1510. It has been designated as a Grade I listed building.[1]
restoration was undertaken by Henry Wilson in 1894 and again in 1904.
The five-stage tower, dating from around 1485,[2] which rises 98.5 feet (30 m) was damaged by lightning and fire on 29 July 1894, but restored within a year preserving the original design.[3] It has a double plinth, offset corner buttresses, dividing strings, battlemented parapet with pairs of corner pinnacles extended from buttresses, and central paired pinnacles corbelled off gargoyles.[1]
The dovecote in the churchyard dates from the 17th century,[4] and was associated with a manor house which was demolished around 1850.[5]