The
parish church of St Giles is built in rubble stone and dates from the 12th century. The nave and lower part of the central tower are largely unchanged from that time; the south arcade was added in the early 13th and the nave re-roofed in the 15th.
J.H. Hakewill carried out alterations and restoration in 1826 and 1851, and in 1888
C.E. Ponting oversaw the rebuilding of the chancel in ornate
Perpendicular style, faced in ashlar. On the outside of the west wall of the nave, below the 1851 window, is a 12th-century carved figure of Christ, seated and with his feet on a dragon. The north side of the tower contains a
Sheela na gig carving, one of only forty five in Britain. The south porch, rebuilt in the 19th century, reuses a 12th-century inner doorway and an outer doorway of , described as exceptional by Historic England, The church was recorded as
Grade II* listed in 1960. Notable rectors include
Frederic Price (cricketer), from 1911 to 1922; who was followed by
Gordon Tidy (soldier, author and poet, for a time in charge of the
cathedral at Bathurst, New South Wales). In 1967 the benefice was united with that of
Grittleton with
Leigh Delamere, and in 1976
Hullavington and
Norton were added. ==Local government==