Sandstone, nave roof has plain tiles, tower has slate.
C12 west tower
two-bay nave, part C14 and part mid-C19
large C14 south aisle
South aisle: large 3-light trefoil and ogee headed C14 east window under moulded hood
blocked doorway with C14 moulding under 2- centred arch in west wall next to tower.
re-set C14 2-light ogee and trefoil headed window in north wall
South porch: contains on east side a late C13 coffin lid with incised cross and foliated enrichments.
INTERIOR: the two bays of nave are separated from south aisle by one C14 octagonal column supporting two 2-centred arches similar to off-centre chancel arch
Chancel: two C14 re-set corbels with heads of man, to north side, and a woman, to south, of east wall.
Two c1900 hinged candle brackets, one each to north and south walls are made of wrought iron with initials SB and five detachable brass sconces to either side.
Nave: mid-C19 pulpit, rectangular in plan with Romanesque style capitals and marble columns to west and marble bas-relief of St Bartholomew set in recess on south side
a dwarf wall to south of chancel arch, in some stonework supports a pine lectern.
Soffit of east window has C14 ox-blood coloured scrolls.
Similar paint to arch over recess in south wall containing recumbent male, C14 effigy with feet resting on a dog and to corbel heads of a bishop and a queen to either side of east window.
C14 piscina on south wall: trefoiled head and foiled drain with two sockets angled inwards from east jamb.
Beneath is a C17 slab resting on its side with two effigies of a woman and a man in armour, both decapitated.
Attached to the west wall an inscribed alabaster slab of Richard Monyngton died 1524, and his wife Alice.