Carleton Rode CEVA Primary School

Local Church

All Saints, Carleton Rode

Carleton Rode is one of the busy little villages to the east of Attleborough. Its church sits at the eastern edge of the village, a large building with a curiously hunch-backed appearance. The first impression is that a large church has been built against a small tower. In fact, the tower was taken down a stage after a partial collapse into the nave in the 18th Century, and the bare clerestory and steeply pitched roof of the nave are an 1850s rebuilding. Pevsner thought the late 13th Century chancel remarkably lavish, although he did bemoan its c1880 restoration. There are aisles to both sides making a church which is wide as well as being long, although that is not immediately obvious from the outside. Simon Cotton points to a number of late 15th Century bequests which leave money to the bells rather than the tower, which suggests perhaps that the parish were happy with their 14th Century tower and had no plans to elaborate it. When the nave was rebuilt, probably at some time in the late 15th century, this was already an aisled church. The east windows of the two aisles are older than the nave, and the east end of the new arcades falls short of the wide chancel arch, leaving an earlier arch in the south arcade which is little more than a large doorway.

Stepping through the south porch into the church, the nave and its aisles open before you, a square space with the serious feeling that comes from the 1870s woodwork which Mortlock credits to Thomas Jekyll, and the clear glass in the windows. The font is a curiosity, for in proportion it is not dissimilar to familiar late medieval East Anglian examples, and yet it is elegantly fluted on bowl and stem with no other imagery. Pevsner thought it was probably 18th Century, in which case it is likely to be a replacement for an earlier font damaged or destroyed by the collapse of the tower. Turning east, the 15th Century rood screen dado survives. If you've not been here for a few years you might be surprised to discover that it is now surmounted by a good late 19th or early 20th Century screen, brought here recently from St John Timberhill in Norwich where it had become surplus to requirements. The dado below it has figures of twelve saints.

http://www.norfolkchurches.co.uk/carletonrode/carletonrode.htm