It is a Grade I listed building, with the main structure dating to a 15th-century rebuild but with some of the earliest parts dating from the Norman period.
[1] During the late 15th century, this church was built to replace an earlier church, and Norman fabric has been re-used inside the tower.
The west tower and the wall of the south aisle were rebuilt between 1757 and 1760.
Most of the church is in Neoclassical style, other than the north aisle, which is Perpendicular.
In the church is the fragment of a Saxon cross.