However present church is all C15, much of it a major rebuild dated 1451, thoroughly renovated in the late C19.
A straight join suggests that the chapel is an addition, probably of 1451.
All are C15.
Nave has a ceiled wagon roof with moulded purlins and ribs, carved oak bosses and a moulded wall plate enriched with 4-leaf motifs.
Aisle has a similar ceiled wagon roof except that here the wall plates are carved with fruiting vines.
Here the ribs and purlins are hollow-chamfered enriched with 4-leaf motifs and the large oak bosses are naively but charmingly carved and feature the tinners hares, the green man and sacred monograms.
The wall plate is similarly carved with foliage and vines.
However the remarkable feature here is the Latin quotations carved on the ribs and purlins.
It records the names of Henry Le Maygne, vicar, "a native of Normandy who caused me to be built AD 1451" and "wrote this with own hand" and Robert of Rouen of Becedden, Prior of Cowick, near Exeter, and Richard Talbot, Lord of Spreyton, who "gave their goods to my building".
C15 piscina in sanctuary.
The altar rail, stalls and low chancel screen which incorporates the pulpit are built of oak in Gothic style.
Plain pine lectern and oak prayer desk.
The remains of a richly carved oak doorway from the former rood screen with delicate Perpendicular tracery is preserved at the back of the church.
Good late Norman granite font with octagonal bowl, each side carved with simple geometric patterns and octagonal stem, each side carved with crude representations nevertheless recognisable for instance as the Tree of Life, Mortality, Our lady crowned etc. An apparently earlier crudely-finished circular font bowl in the north aisle.
Monuments: the mural monuments are C18 and C19.
East window has C19 glass.