[3] The large 11th-century church is up the hill; the tower at its western end was destroyed by an earth tremor in 1739 and restored in 1750.
[4] On pillars on the south side of the nave is mediaeval graffiti depicting ships.
Going round into the north transept, it is clear that Roman masonry was re-used in the building of the arch, which is narrow and late-Saxon in style.
Lionel Lukin, credited with inventing the self-righting lifeboat, is buried in the parish churchyard.
[6] It has "the largest and best-preserved collection of ancient human skulls and bones in Britain".