Europe, British Isles, England, Welsh March, Herefordshire, Leintwardine, St Mary Magdalene's Church [Map]

St Mary Magdalene's Church, Leintwardine is in Leintwardine, Herefordshire [Map].

Between 1174 and 1179 Hugh Mortimer granted St Mary Magdalene's Church, Leintwardine [Map] to his new foundation of Wigmore Abbey [Map]. The St Mary Magdalene's Church, Leintwardine [Map] is built partly in the vallum, or ditch, that enclosed the Roman town of Bravonium. The foundations are Saxon and Norman but the main part of the church is 13th and 14th century. The earliest detail in the church is the blocked 12th-century W. doorway, which is probably not in situ. Towards the end of the thirteenth century a south aisle was added to the nave and in the first half of the fourteenth century a north aisle and two chapels were added together with a new chancel and an impressive south tower of five storeys over a powerful porch.

After 1326 Roger Mortimer 1st Earl March (age 38) commissioned the building of the Mortimer chapel, now known as the Lady Chapel, at St Mary Magdalene's Church, Leintwardine [Map].

Around Sep 1353 King Edward III of England (age 40) visited St Mary Magdalene's Church, Leintwardine [Map] and laid a cloth of gold at the feet of the statue of the Virgin Mary.

Memorials inside St Mary Magdalene's Church, Leintwardine [Map].

1835. Memorial to Banastre Tarleton 1st Baronet sculpted by Peter Rouw (age 63) at St Mary Magdalene's Church, Leintwardine [Map].

2010. A number of new misericords added to St Mary Magdalene's Church, Leintwardine [Map] after 2010.