All Saints Church, Billesley

[1][4] The church is constructed in blue lias stone, and it has a tiled roof.

[2] The plan consists of a two-bay nave with an apse at the east end, a west porch and a south transept, which was initially a family pew and was later used as a vestry.

The bellcote is louvred and has a cornice, an ogival cupola, and a weathervane.

One is a tympanum dating from about 1140 that depicts a man being attacked by a snake and a dragon, and being defended by a dove.

It dates from about 1150 and it contains a figure of Christ holding a cross shaft.

[3] Investigators looking through the church floor have found a crypt and have seen inside two sarcophagi and a chest; the crypt has not been opened in recent history but plans are underway to open it in 2011 as part of an inspection of the state of the church floor.