St Giles' Church, Northampton

{{Short description|Church of England building in Northamptonshire}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2024}}

{{Use British English|date=May 2024}}

{{Infobox church

| name = St Giles' Church

| image = Šv. Gilio bažnyčia, Nortamptonas 20250125 090456.jpg

| caption = St Giles' Church, Northampton in 2025

| dedication = Saint Giles

| denomination = Church of England

| churchmanship = Evangelical Anglicanism

| parish = Northampton St Giles

| deanery = Greater Northampton

| archdeaconry = Northampton

| diocese = Peterborough

| province = Canterbury

| country = England

| bishop = Right Revd Debbie Sellin

| vicar = Revd Joshua Thorne

| organistdom =

| organist =

| warden = David Lidbetter
Stephen Hewitson

| website = {{Official website|https://www.stgilesnorthampton.org.uk/}}

}}

File:A history of the Church of St. Giles, Northampton (1911) (14780339601).jpg

St Giles' Church, Northampton is a Church of England parish church in Northampton, within the Diocese of Peterborough. The church is a Grade I listed building.{{NHLE| num=1052403 |desc=Church of St Giles |grade=I |accessdate=11 May 2024}}

The oldest fabric is probably 12th century but the church had a thorough Victorian restoration. The tall crossing tower is 12th century but the upper stages were rebuilt in 1616 after a collapse, and the top was renewed in 1914. The 12th-century west doorway has been reset and restored. The chancel is probably 12th century but later widened, with remains of 13th-century lancet windows. The pulpit is Jacobean. The stained glass in the East window (1878) is by Clayton and Bell.

The Victorian restoration by Edmund Francis Law was based on the 1840 report of George Gilbert Scott whose brother was curate.Pevsner, Northants p. 320 Law's restoration included an outer north aisle and west end rebuilding with porches, 1853–55. The chancel was restored in 1876.

There is a 15th-century Paynell-Gobion alabaster table tomb and good 17th- and 18th-century wall monuments. James Keill (died 1719) was buried in St Giles', where a monument, with a Latin inscription, was erected. The monument (1743) to Samuel Pennington is by John Hunt. Robert Browne (died 1633) was buried in the churchyard where his monument stands by the south door.

Patronage

Since 1833, when the Rev. Edward Watkin sold the advowson, the patronage has been held by the Simeon trustees, a body with the purpose of acquiring church patronage to perpetuate evangelical Anglican clergy in Church of England parishes.{{cite EB1911|wstitle=Simeon, Charles|volume=25}}{{cite web |title=The History of Simeon's Trustees |url=http://www.simeons.org.uk/simeons-trustees-history |website=Simeons.org.uk |access-date=13 May 2024}}

See also

References

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