Celtic Cross
Outside the main church door, the granite cross is thought to be much older than the church itself (possibly eight century).
A wheel-headed cross, at some point used as a gatepost and damaged.
It was moved into the churchyard in the nineteenth century from near Carburrow.
It may have originally been used to mark the path across the moors from Warleggan to
Temple.
EXTERNAL WALLS
PICTURE OF CELTIC CROSS
GRANITE RUBBLE
The building materials that form most of the north wall and
half of the east are made up from rubble (fragments of granite, elvan and vein
quartz etc.), this confirms the pre fifteenth century date. The granite moor
stone blocks of the south wall, tower and the rest of the chancel indicate an
extension was added about 1480, this would have virtually doubled the size of
the church.