All Saints Church, East Meon
| All Saints' Church, East Meon | |
|---|---|
All Saints' Church, East Meon  | |
| 50°59′45″N 1°01′53″W / 50.9959°N 1.0315°W | |
| Location | East Meon, Hampshire | 
| Country | England | 
| Denomination | Anglican | 
| Website | http://www3.hants.gov.uk/parish/east-meon | 
| History | |
| Status | Parish church | 
| Founded | c. 1080 or c. 1130–40 | 
| Dedication | All Saints | 
| Architecture | |
| Functional status | Active | 
| Heritage designation | Listed building – Grade I | 
| Style | Norman, Early English | 
| Specifications | |
| Materials | Stone | 
| Administration | |
| Province | Canterbury | 
| Diocese | Portsmouth | 
| Clergy | |
| Bishop(s) | Bishop of Portsmouth | 
| Vicar(s) | Reverend Tony Forrest | 
All Saints' Church is an Anglican parish church in the village of East Meon, Hampshire, England. It is a Grade I listed building and the oldest building in the village, lying so tight to a hill to the north of the village – part of the South Downs – that there was no room for a north aisle to be built. Most of the church dates from the Norman period, with the south chapel and south aisle being added in the 13th century.
According to Nikolaus Pevsner it is "one of the most thrilling village churches in Hampshire", to John Betjeman it is "a striking, boldly massed church set above the village against a green down", while Simon Jenkins states that of the Saxon foundations in the Meon valley, "few are as satisfying as East Meon".