St Mary Magdalene's Church, Tortington

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LocationOff Ford Road, Tortington, Arundel, West Sussex BN18 0BG
CountryEngland
St Mary Magdalene's Church
The church from the southeast
50°50′09″N 0°34′37″W / 50.8357°N 0.5769°W / 50.8357; -0.5769
LocationOff Ford Road, Tortington, Arundel, West Sussex BN18 0BG
CountryEngland
DenominationChurch of England
History
StatusParish church
Founded12th century
DedicationMary Magdalene
Events1978: declared redundant[1]
Architecture
Functional statusRedundant
Heritage designationGrade II
Designated5 June 1958
StyleNorman
Groundbreaking12th century
Administration
ProvinceCanterbury
DioceseChichester
ArchdeaconryChichester
DeaneryRural Deanery of Arundel and Bognor
ParishArundel with Tortington[2]

St Mary Magdalene's Church is the former Anglican parish church of the hamlet of Tortington in the district of Arun, one of seven local government districts in the English county of West Sussex. Founded in the 12th century to serve a priory and villagers in the riverside location, it has experienced little change despite a 19th-century restoration. Its ancient chancel arch and doorway have remarkable carvings with "grotesque, boggle-eyed monsters", rare beakhead figures and chevron ornamentation. Standing in a picturesque[3] setting behind a farm, the flint and Caen stone building was used for worship until 1978, when it was declared redundant. It is now cared for by the Churches Conservation Trust, and English Heritage has listed it at Grade II for its architectural and historical importance. The church is dedicated to Jesus's companion Mary Magdalene.

Parochial history

Tortington is an ancient manor and parish next to the River Arun in West Sussex. The ecclesiastical parish was originally shaped like an inverted triangle, but many boundary changes took place over the centuries. As well as the manor – mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086 – there was a medieval Augustinian monastery, Tortington Priory.[4] An agricultural hamlet had developed by the 12th century, and its layout and function have changed little since then.[5]

The church retains a 12th-century doorway with carvings "like something out of a medieval fantasy".[6]

A church was first mentioned in the mid-12th century, when there was a rectory.[4] It was built primarily to serve the priory.[7] The doorway[5] and "delightful" chancel arch[8] survive from that era (both have been dated to c. 1140), and the layout and fabric of the church are still largely 12th-century despite subsequent restoration.[5] An aisle with two bays was added to the south side of the nave in the 13th century,[9][10] and the doorway was moved to accommodate it. The aisle was later destroyed (during or before the 18th century), and its arcade was blocked.[4][9][10] Another 13th-century change was the addition of lancet windows in the north and south walls of the chancel.[10]

The church was quick to install seating for parishioners as this gradually became standard in the 15th and 16th centuries (until then, churches had none).[11] Some of these early seats survive, in the form of plain, straight-headed wooden benches.[12] Features described in the medieval period but now lost include a Lady chapel – a recess on the outside of the chancel wall may be a remnant of this – a leaded steeple and a porch, of which there are fragmentary remains.[4] A white bell-turret, similar to that at St Andrew's Church at nearby Ford, replaced the steeple.[5][13] Constructed of timber and added in the 18th century, it was apparently painted white to help with navigation along the adjacent River Arun.[4] Also in the 18th century, the chancel arch and chancel roof were remodelled (the nave had already acquired a timber king post roof in the medieval era)[4]

The south aisle, added in 1867, replaced a 13th-century aisle which had been destroyed many years before.

Many Sussex churches were restored during the Victorian era, sometimes drastically;[14] St Mary Magdalene's Church was reordered in 1867, but the changes were modest. A new south aisle was built to replace the destroyed 13th-century aisle, and the arcade separating it from the nave was unblocked. The doorway was moved to its original position as a result.[4][10] A vestry was built on the north side in 1892,[4] and Philip Mainwaring Johnston undertook further work in 1904.[15]

The area remained sparsely populated in the 20th century, and congregations declined. The Diocese of Chichester declared St Mary Magdalene's Church redundant on 1 August 1978.[1][4] It was placed into the care of the Redundant Churches Fund (now the Churches Conservation Trust) on 21 April 1980,[1] and is now one of five former churches in West Sussex administered by the charity; the others are at Chichester, Church Norton, North Stoke and Warminghurst.[16]

St Mary Magdalene's Church was listed at Grade II by English Heritage on 5 June 1958.[17] Such buildings are defined as being "nationally important and of special interest".[18] As of February 2001, it was one of 913 Grade II listed buildings, and 960 listed buildings of all grades, in the district of Arun.[19]

The parish boundaries and advowson of St Mary Magdalene's Church have a complicated history. For most of its existence, it was a parish church with its own vicar, although the incumbents did not always live in the parish (they generally lived in nearby Arundel from the early 19th century onwards). The church at Binsted was within the parish in the 16th century. In 1897, the parish ceased to be independent: it became part of a joint benefice with Arundel. A third church, at South Stoke, was added to this arrangement in 1929; the parishes were never merged though.[4] Tortington's identity survives as of 2025 in the legal name of the parish of St Nicholas's Church, Arundel: Arundel with Tortington. Its benefice is still called Arundel with Tortington and South Stoke.[20]

The advowson (the right to appoint clergy) was first mentioned in 1214, when it was held by William d'Aubigny, 3rd Earl of Arundel. It passed to Tortington Priory by 1380 and stayed with that institution until the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the mid-16th century, when it passed to the Lord of the Manor at Tortington Manor. This continued throughout the 16th and 17th centuries, although the Earl of Arundel apparently held the right again in 1579 and The Crown made three appointments in the 17th century. Various other noblemen held the advowson in the 18th and 19th centuries until it passed to the Bishop of Chichester in 1897.[4]

Architecture

See also

References

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