Another fine example would be Temple Church, dating from the 1200s but in layer upon layer. The design of the unusual round tower is the kind used to pay homage to the Church of Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem -a nod to Dark Ages design. Note different stages of stonework, ending in positively Georgian refacing of Bath stone at the top:
The ancient doorway - the different colours of stone show the 1200s original on the inside, and Victorian restorations on the outer 3 columns. The stone on the walls beyond, on the left medieval, on the right the Georgian refacing
13th Century tombs watch the layers of history rise above them, literally
While those from the Tudor times get a baroque makeover a century later:
The intricate medieval glass is actually an entirely new commission from 1957:
And no ones sure which of the gargoyles' are Victorian (who had a hard on for medievalism) or genuinely Gothic