C15, chancel rebuilt C19, restoration 1863 by Hadfield.
Nave: separately-roofed south aisle with porch to bay 1 having diagonal buttresses flanking pointed-arched doorway with shafted jambs and hoodmould with busts as hoodstops, image niche over and moulded oversailing course returning as side cornice with gargoyles, roll-moulded gable copings.
Chamfered plinth and moulded band, painted priest's door and two 2-light windows on south with simple pointed heads and head-carved hoodstops on mould dropped from oversalling course beneath coped parapet.
Angle buttresses flank 3-light east window with mouchettes and head-carved stops to hoodmould.
Arcades: cylindrical piers to west and octagonal piers to east having moulded capitals (that to north-west with renewed carving) and double-chamfered round arches with continous hoodmoulds.
with part of base cut away and with reclining man carved at the foot (Pevsner, plate 29), castellated top with tracery motifs
Stained glass
heraldic glass at east end of south aisle
Monuments: wall plaques in south aisle to Thomas Gray and William Mason (d1797)of coade stone with portraits in medallions.
Chancel: on north wall the kneeling alabaster figure of Lord John Darcy (d1624) set above his three wives in a later recess with Corinthian columns and open pediment