Friday, 25 October 2024

St. Mary, Rickinghall Inferior

 It's called Inferior due to being down in the village - lower than Rickinghall Superior on higher ground a mile or so away.

One of Suffolk's round tower churches and quite an unusual shape with a south aisle the same width as the nave.

It was a gloomy Saturday morning - the time I knew the church would be open- when I visited so the photos aren't so good except with a flash inside.



The porch is interesting with these open windows  

and seating inside

The view down the nave


The reredos behind the altar is medieval and Simon Knott in the Suffolk Churches site says it might have come from the rood loft as they are too short to be from the rood screen

The wide south aisle


The font has a very unusual cover.




The stained glass in this window is made up of small pieces saved from a much earlier time




A US Regimental flag given to the church in memory of the hospital situated in the village during  1944-45




The glass below commemorates the Millenium


The boards below tell the story of the recent restoration of the roof



Very few of the churches I visit have candles to light in remembrance but when they do I always light one


It's difficult to read who this memorial is remembering but I don't think it's a war memorial.






Here's the LINK to the Suffolk Churches Index for more details.

While I was googling to find out why there was a US flag in the church I came across THIS  "Village in the Wheatfields " about Rickinghall in 1949 from the East Anglian Film Archive. The narrators accent is definitely NOT a Suffolk one! and the people filmed were not always who they were supposed to be.

This is the site in case the link doesn't work    https://eafa.org.uk/work/?id=1829


Back Soon
Sue

9 comments:

  1. Well I've come across Uppers and Lowers in place names but never Superior and Inferior!
    The round bell tower gives an almost fairy tale castle quality to the little church.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Interesting church, and lovely film (in spite of the dodgy accents!) which show life changing from the centuries old rural traditions to modern mechanised farming.

    ReplyDelete
  3. The stained glass windows are beautiful - what wonderful treasures for the church to have :)

    ReplyDelete
  4. Super church. I love the porch and the round tower is splendid. The top of the octagonal section looks like a crown. J’nan

    ReplyDelete
  5. Here in France there used to be a district called Loire Inférieure... It was renamed Loire Atlantique many years ago.
    The memorial seems to read Richard Compton French, and 1875 in the lower part.
    Thank you for this post (and all the others) !
    Maguy

    ReplyDelete
  6. Nothing inferior about that church especially with the round tower which could well be Saxon. The porch looks like it has a room over it as well, a beautiful church well worth looking around.
    The Church Explorer

    ReplyDelete
  7. Thanks, a nice visit to a place most of us will never see in person.

    ReplyDelete
  8. I've never heard "inferior" used to designate a lower ground location. The tower is a lovely architectural feature, and the stained glass is beautiful.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Such beautiful stained glass in this lovely old church.
    I admired the quilts both small and large in your last post. Too bad you didn't win one.

    ReplyDelete