This picture-postcard Medieval church stands in a gently sloping churchyard by the river Leach, just a stone’s throw from its sister church at Eastleach Turville on the opposite bank.
The two are linked by a stone clapper bridge known as Keble’s Bridge after its 19th-century curate John Keble, a much-loved poet and Oxford scholar.
The church’s treasures include three beautiful carved windows which feature Decorated tracery, mouldings and tiny stone heads from the 13th century.
Other things to find include: a lectern made from Elizabethan table legs and bedposts a Medieval font with an octagonal bowl fragments of the original Medieval stained glass.
A visit in spring is particularly delightful when daffodils line the river banks and the approaches to the bridge.