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From this period comes the waggon roof, with its interesting carved bosses, probably of 1461.
The waggon roof above the nave and north aisle is medieval.
Both the nave and the chancel have 19th-century waggon roofs.
Inside the church the nave and chancel are in one vessel with a single waggon roof.
The nave has a flat ceiling and the chancel a waggon roof.
Inside the church, the nave has a waggon roof, while the chancel is tunnel vaulted.
Inside the church are waggon roofs.
The nave has a waggon roof, and four-bay arcades carried on round columns.
I wonder if this will be legible; my present station on the waggon roof, though airy compared to the cars, is both dirty and insecure.
He added an apse, in a Byzantine style, integrating it to the existing plain structure by substituting a waggon roof for the existing flat ceiling.
The Chancel Arch is wide and richly moulded and reaches towards the nave's waggon roof which is perfectly semi-circular.
During the Tudor years the fine waggon roof was built over St. Mary's Church and possibly the set of old oak pews which may however date from even earlier.