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chancel and legend
The interior, the nave of which is almost twice as high as it is wide, has a very high arcade, like German hall churches, carried on clusters of thin shafts, those of the chancel being decorated in paint and gold leaf with a helical pattern like a barber's pole, bearing the legend Sanctus Sanctus Sanctus Dominus Deus Sabaoth (' Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God of Hosts ').

chancel and Saint
The chancel walls of the Church of England parish church of Saint Peter still include 12th century masonry.
The nave and chancel of the Church of England parish church of Saint Mary Magdalene are 11th century.
The former Church of England parish church of Saint Peter is Norman, with a mid-12th century nave and even earlier chancel.
On the site of a former nunnery at Chich, Richard de Belmeis of London, in the reign of Henry I founded a priory for canons of Saint Augustine, and dedicated it to Saint Osgyth ; his remains were buried in the chancel of the church in 1127: he bequeathed the church and tithes to the canons, who elected as their first abbot or prior William de Corbeil, afterwards Archbishop of Canterbury ( died in 1136 ).
The nave of the Church of England parish church of Saint George was built in about 1190 in the transitional style between Norman and Early English, and the chancel is probably of the same date.
In the 13th century the chancel was rebuilt, the nave was altered and the church was dedicated to Saint Mary.
The Church of England parish church of Saint James has a 13th century chancel.
The earliest parts of the Church of England parish church of Saint Mary the Virgin include the chancel, west tower and south doorway, which date from about 1300.
The church of Saint Botolph is a plain building of coarse rubble, dating from the 13th century, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles and a western bell cote, containing one bell.
Fragments of Mediaeval wall paintings survive inside St. Mary's, including a Doom painting over the chancel arch and Saint Christopher over the north doorway.
Parts of the Church of England parish church of Saint James the Apostle date from the 13th century, including the north side of the chancel and the arcade of the south aisle.
The Church of England parish church of Saint Mary may originally have been 12th century, as a Norman doorway of that date survives in the chancel.
The Church of England parish church of Saint Andrew consists of a chancel, nave, north aisle, north-west vestry, south porch and a west tower.
A window representing Saint Cecilia, patron saint of church music, was unveiled in 1876 in the pulpit side of the chancel, though by 1969 it was ironically concealed by the organ.
The Church of England parish church of Saint Andrew has an 11th century Saxo-Norman chancel that combines characteristically Saxon double-splayed windows with Norman flat buttresses and has reached Grade I listed status.
One features of Saint Mary ’ s are the large image niches, one in the nave and two in the chancel either side of the east window.
They enlarged the rear and installed the roof balustrade, containing balusters once part of the chancel of Saint Paul's Cathedral in Boston.
Saint Peters Church stands on the west of the village and consists of a chancel, nave and tower.

chancel and Nicholas
St. Nicholas ' chancel, showing 14th-century Decorated Gothic east window with reticulated tracery and 14th-century roof.
In the chancel is a Renaissance style monument to the lord of the manor, Sir William Stonhouse ( died 1632 ), made by Nicholas Stone.
Parker also designed the triplet of traceried lancet windows in the chancel of St. Nicholas the Confessor, Forest Hill.
In the chancel are several inscribed commemorative stones, the oldest of which is to Sir Nicholas de Hebden ( died 1416 ), and his wife Katherine ( died 1447 ).
Nicholas de Luda ( d. 1382 ), a capuchin friar, who built or re-built the chancel is commemorated by a brass in the church.
The church of St Peter is an ancient edifice of flint and stone in the Decorated style, consisting of chancel, nave of four bays, south aisle, north and south porches and a lofty embattled tower containing a clock and one bell: in the church is a monument to Nicholas Saunderson LL. D., F. R. S.
The current Church of St Nicholas is Norman in origin, with the chancel and lower stage of the tower dating from the 13th century.
On the south wall of chancel to Nicholas Bonfoy, Serjeant-at-Arms, son and heir of Nicholas Bonfoy of Abbots Ripton, and Elizabeth, daughter of William Hale, of Kings Walden, d. 12 Oct. 1775 ; to John Bonfoy Rooper, d. 11 Mar.

chancel and has
The Romanesque chancel arch has three orders, with highly ornamented capitals.
The church, built in simple style, has a granite doorway with sloping jambs and flat lintel and a granite chancel arch.
It has an 11th-century chancel and windows.
It has the world's largest fan-vault, and the chapel's stained-glass windows and wooden chancel screen are considered some of the finest from their era.
The oldest parts of the Anglican parish church of St Lawrence include the chancel, which was built in the 12th century and still has three Norman windows in its north wall.
The shafted south-east angle of the 12th century nave is still visible outside, while the chancel has 12th century windows to the north and south.
Godalming Parish Church has an early Saxon chancel and Norman tower.
St Mary's Church, Kempley has in its chancel " the most complete set of Romanesque frescos in northern Europe ", including the Christ in Majesty painting created in about 1120.
The chancel organ, in the north ambulatory, was made by the St. Louis, Missouri, firm of George Kilgen & Son, and installed in 1928 ; it has 3, 920 pipes.
It has a cruciform plan with an aisled nave ; two chapels in each transept and a square ended aisled chancel.
Gillingham's church has a 14th century chancel, though most of the rest of the building was built in the 19th and 20th centuries.
In its 13th century state-much of the basic layout of which survives today-the church was cruciform in plan, with an aisled bay of six naves, a crossing tower, transepts, a five bay chancel, and a retrochoir or “ Lady Chapel ”, the form of which has also been interpreted as group of four chapels with separate gabled roofs, two opening from the choir, and two from each aisle.
Kellys wrote of the church and its history: The church of St. James is a building of stone, in the Decorated style, erected in 1845-6 from designs by Mr. G. G. Place, of Nottingham, and consisting of chancel, nave, aisles and a tower, as yet unfinished: it has a very elaborately carved Perpendicular font, and the east window and some others are stained ... the destruction of the earlier church in 1643 services were afterwards held in the Chapel of St. Mary, a small building in the middle of the village, which was taken down in 1793, and a church erected on the same site: the present edifice will seat 400 persons.
The chancel and south aisle were enlarged in 1892 and the east end of the south aisle has been used as a chapel since 1927.
The Decorated Gothic chancel is early 14th century and has a five-light east window.
It is built of flint and has a chancel, nave with two aisles, north transept and a square tower at the west end.
The 12th-century chancel arch has a two-centred head, and the responds have scalloped capitals and moulded bases.
It also has doors at the four cardinal points ; of note are the eight misericords in the chancel.
The unaisled chancel, now housing a huge organ, has been shortened.
Inside, the chancel arch has unusual corbels of a man and a monkey.
The present church has a chancel and nave, a south aisle and a north transept.
Within the church, which is the longest parish church in Kent, the ancient family of Godfrey of Lydd are represented by a brass in the C13th nave which has the date 1430 upon it, and a bust set in the north wall of the chancel ; descendants of this family are to be found on World War II memorial.
The Church of England parish church of All Saints has an early 14th century chancel arch.
The chancel has two 13th-century lancet windows in its north wall.
The south wall of the chancel has at its east end a window from about 1350 that is said to have been brought from elsewhere, and towards the west end a 15th-century window with a depressed head.

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