Uploaded on:
2009-02-19 07:35:30.0
Type:
Digital Asset
File Size:
240.09 KB
Dimensions:
663 x 1000 pixels
1522 views 5 downloads
P number: P212490
Old photograph number: A13394
Caption: St. Mary's Church, Sompting, West Sussex.
Description: This church with its rare but distinctive Saxon tower with a 'gabled pyramidal cap' or Rheinish Helm (Rhineland Helmet)is suggestive of early German (Saxon) architectural influence. Nevertheless it is built principally of flint nodules and local sandstones from the Weald Clay Formation. The walls of Sompting Church are built mainly of undressed flint nodules. The quoins are of a variety of rock types, some possibly derived from older buildings. The nave and transept are roofed with thin sandstone slabs from the Weald Clay. The unusual tower of this church is an important Saxon structure. Many of the churches of West Sussex were principally constructed from locally 'quarried' flints, the only suitable building stone readily available. The Rheinish Helm on top of the tower is an original Anglo-Saxon spire, the only one in the country.
Date taken: Mon Jan 01 00:00:00 GMT 1979
Photographer: Jeffery, C.J.
Copyright statement: NERC
X longitude/easting: 516150
Y latitude/northing: 105640
Coordinate reference system, ESPG code: 27700 (OSGB 1936 / British National Grid)
Orientation: Portrait
Size: 240.09 KB; 663 x 1000 pixels; 56 x 85 mm (print at 300 DPI); 175 x 265 mm (screen at 96 DPI);
Average Rating: Not yet rated
Categories: Unsorted Images, Geoscience subjects/ Economic geology/ Building stones  

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