Neha Patil (Editor)

Church of St Mary, Chartham

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Location
  
Chartham, Kent

Denomination
  
Anglican

Founded
  
c. 1285

Opened
  
1305

Status
  
Parish church

Country
  
England

Website
  
St Mary's, Chartham

Functional status
  
Active

Phone
  
+44 1227 730141

Diocese
  
Diocese of Canterbury

Church of St Mary, Chartham

Address
  
Church Lane, Chartham, Canterbury CT4 7JW, United Kingdom

Similar
  
Chartham railway station, St Nicholas' Church - S, Selling railway station, Old Synagogue, St Martin's Church - Canterbury

Profiles

St Mary's Church is in the village of Chartham, Kent, England. It is an active Anglican parish church in the diocese of Canterbury. Constructed between 1285 and circa 1305, with a later tower of the fourteenth century, the church was restored in 1875 by George Edmund Street. The church is designated by English Heritage as a Grade I listed building.

Architecture and fittings

The church is constructed of Kentish knapped flint with ragstone quoins. It is of cruciform design, with nave, transepts, chancel and tower. The church has a number of features of particular note. The nave, transepts and crossing have "a magnificent series of c. 1300 timber roofs with large scissor-trussed rafters." The windows in the chancel are considered amongst the very best examples of Kentish tracery. The stained glass, although "much renewed in 1881 (has) enough glass of c.1294 to guarantee the authenticity of the whole." The brass of the medieval knight, Sir Robert de Septvans, is the one of the oldest in the country and "none are more memorable." The church also contains monuments by Rysbrack and Thomas Scheemakers.

References

Church of St Mary, Chartham Wikipedia