Full Report for Listed Buildings


Summary Description of a Listed Buildings


Reference Number
2919
Building Number
 
Grade
II  
Status
Designated  
Date of Designation
01/03/1963  
Date of Amendment
19/12/1995  
Name of Property
Parish Church of Langstone  
Address
 

Location


Unitary Authority
Newport  
Community
Langstone  
Town
 
Locality
Langstone  
Easting
337129  
Northing
189156  
Street Side
 
Location
Located on the E side of Langstone Lane leading from Langstone to Llanwern..  

Description


Broad Class
Religious, Ritual and Funerary  
Period
 

History
Church with C13 origins. The nave was extended in 1622 after the S porch which is probably C16. The church was restored in 1907. The N and S chapels to the chancel probably date from this time.  

Exterior
Church consists of nave, chancel, S porch, bellcote and N and S chapels to the chancel. The church is constructed of blue lias and local pink sandstone with some Roman bricks to the porch. The roofs are clad in natural slate. The majority of the fenestration is in Perp style with hollow chamfered mullions, cusped heads, flat hoodmoulds with simple square labels and sandstone dressings. The E window is C19, two-light, with quatrefoil to the head and simple hoodmould over. High up on the chancel gable are what appear to be three early window heads, re-set, with trefoil heads and sunk spandrels. The chancel is lit on the N and S side by early, leaded, two-light windows. The N and S chapels adjoin the chancel and have modern fenestration; the S chapel has a large squat lancet beneath a voussoired arch on the E wall and the N chapel is lit by a large three-light, cusped window on the N elevation beneath voussoired arch. The S side of the nave is lit by a further early windows at the E end and by a C19 copy at the W end, under a more complexly moulded hoodmould. The N side of the nave reveals the C17 extension which is inset from the earlier nave. The W end is lit by a surviving Early English lancet with shallow cusping to the head and plain chamfer to the jambs. Presumably re-set. The main body of the nave has a further early two-light window. The N side of the nave has a stone plinth along its length. The S porch is probably early C16 with round-headed outer arch with chamfered jambs, the inner doorway is also round-headed with dressed stone jambs with diagonal stops. The roof has an ovolo-moulded collar purlin with arched braces and two moulded purlins. Evidence of bosses to collar purlin now lost. The W end has a bellcote with a single bell, a C17 window with stained glass and four-centred arch is below it. At ground floor is a large doorway with oak doorframe and boarded door and the following inscription is carved in the lintel: April the 7 Anno Domini 1622 Theophilus Bishop John Renaldes Edward William Church Warden  

Interior
Chancel arch is high, two-centred and plain with a C19 boarded roof to the nave and chancel. Windows have deeply splayed reveals. All furnishings are C19. Small octagonal C19 font to W of doorway.  

Reason for designation
Listed grade II for the special interest of its surviving early fabric.  

Cadw : Full Report for Listed Buildings [ Records 1 of 1 ]





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