St Martin of Tours Church, Detling

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St Martin of Tours Church
Church from the south-east
Church from the south-east
St Martin of Tours Church, Detling is located in Kent
St Martin of Tours Church, Detling
Location within Kent
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Location Detling, Kent
Country England
Denomination Anglican
Website Detling Church
Architecture
Status Parish church
Functional status Active
Heritage designation Grade I
Designated 26 April 1968
Style Early Norman/
Perpendicular Gothic
Completed c. 1100, 13th and 15th centuries
Specifications
Materials Rag-stone, Flint
Administration
Parish St Martin of Tours Church, Detling
Deanery North Downs
Archdeaconry Maidstone
Diocese Canterbury
Province Canterbury

St Martin of Tours is a parish church in Detling, Kent. Dedicated to Martin of Tours, the building was constructed in the 12th century with 13th and 15th-century additions and restoration carried out in the late 19th century. It is a Grade I listed building.[1]

File:St Martin, Detling, Kent - East end - geograph.org.uk - 326279.jpg
Nave looking towards the chancel and the east end

The nave and chancel are of early Norman construction and built of flint with a plain tiled roof. The aisle to the north of the nave is Early English and is constructed of flint and local rag-stone. It was enlarged in the 1880s. The adjacent chapel on the north side of the chancel and the porch on the south side of the nave are Perpendicular Gothic. The tower is built in two stages of galletted rag-stone with diagonal corner buttresses. The timber-shingled broach spire was added in 1861 by R. C. Hussey. The roof structure to the chapel is original, but the rest of the roof was replaced in the 19th century.[1]

The church windows are of varying sizes and periods although mostly perpendicular in style. Over the doorway on the west side of the tower is a large rectangular three-lighted perpendicular window added in the 19th century. The windows to the nave, aisle and chapel are mainly two-lighted in design. Those to the south-east and east of the chancel and three-lighted. Internally, the nave and aisle are separated by a pair of wide plain arches and the chancel and chapel by a single arch.[1]

The large twelve-sided font is early and plain and stands on a 20th-century base, having once been built into the wall of the tower.[1][2] An ornately carved four-sided oak lectern dates from 1340–50.[2][3] It probably came from Boxley Abbey and has been described as "the finest medieval fitting in any parish church in the county".[4] The church's pipe organ dates from the 1850s and was brought from the Congregational Church in Maidstone in 1973.[3]

The churchyard contains a headstone and a table tomb that are Grade II listed.[5]

See also

References

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