Church building

Holy Trinity Church, Acaster Malbis

United Kingdom Acaster Malbis Grade I listed building
Holy Trinity Church, Acaster Malbis
Holy Trinity Church, Acaster Malbis · Wikipedia

About

Holy Trinity Church is an active Anglican church in Acaster Malbis, a village in the City of York, in England. It is a grade I listed building. A church has existed on this site since at least the 12th century.

Holy Trinity Church, Acaster Malbis

It was rebuilt in limestone in about 1320, by the Fairfax family. It has a cruciform plan, with a south porch, with a pointed arch. The nave is of three bays, the chancel of two, and each transept a single bay.

Holy Trinity Church, Acaster Malbis

The windows to the north and south have three lights, with a larger, five-light window at the west end, and a seven-light window at the east end. They are deeply set in arched reveals. Each light has an ogee arch, design which Nikolaus Pevsner describes as initially appearing to be a later alteration, but actually contemporary with the original construction of the church.

Above the windows in the west and south gables are quatrefoil windows, a trefoil in the north transept, and a sexfoil in the east gable. The east window has stained glass of 1320, which Pevsner describes as "very fine", and some more in the south transept window. Inside, there is a mediaeval font, sections of a mediaeval wall painting on the north wall, and a piscina with ogee arches.

Holy Trinity Church, Acaster Malbis

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