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Balscote

Village in Oxfordshire, England

Balscote

Summary

Village in Oxfordshire, England

FieldValue
countryEngland
static_image_nameBalscote Church (geograph 4967293).jpg
static_image_captionParish church of St Mary Magdalene
label_positionbottom
coordinates
official_nameBalscote
civil_parishWroxton
shire_districtCherwell
shire_countyOxfordshire
regionSouth East England
constituency_westminsterBanbury
post_townBanbury
postcode_districtOX15
postcode_areaOX
dial_code01295
os_grid_referenceSP3941
websiteWroxton & Balscote Community Web Site

Balscote or Balscott is a village in the civil parish of Wroxton, Oxfordshire, about 4 mi west of Banbury. The Domesday Book of 1086 records the place-name as Berescote. Curia regis rolls from 1204 and 1208 record it as Belescot. An entry in the Book of Fees for 1242 records it as Balescot. Its origin is Old English, meaning the cottage, house or manor of a man called Bælli.

Church and chapel

Church of England

The earliest features of the Church of England parish church of St Mary Magdalene include a Norman font and an Early English Gothic window. Most of the present church building is 14th-century, built in a Decorated Gothic style. It is a Grade II* listed building. The parish of St Mary Magdalene is now one of eight in the Ironstone Benefice.

Balscote Methodist chapel

Methodist chapel

Balscote had a Methodist chapel but this has now been converted into a private home.

Secular buildings

Much of the village is designated as a conservation area, with many of Balscote's buildings being of local Hornton Stone. Priory Farm is a 14th-century hall, extended in the 15th century and modernised in the 17th and 18th centuries. Grange Farm is a 15th- or early 16th-century house, extended and modernised in the 17th and 18th centuries. Both houses may have been built by the owners of nearby Wroxton Abbey.

Balscote has a public house, The Butchers Arms, which is controlled by the Hook Norton Brewery. In 1996 Balscote Village Hall Trust, a registered charity, started planning and fund-raising to build a community hall. Building began in October 2010 and was completed in 2011. It is a timber building.

The Butchers Arms

Notable residents

  • Nicholas de Balscote (died 1320), Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer, was born in Balscote.
  • Alexander Petit (died 1400), one of the dominant figures in late 14th-century Ireland, was also a native of Balscote. He held many important offices including Bishop of Ossory, Bishop of Meath and Lord Chancellor of Ireland. As was usual at the time he was more commonly referred to, not by his family name, but his birthplace, as Alexander de Balscot. He may have been a relative of Nicholas de Balscote, who is known to have appointed several family members to important positions in Ireland, or they may simply have shared a birthplace.

References

Bibliography

References

  1. {{NHLE
  2. (24 June 2019). "Welcome to the eight Churches of the Ironstone Benefice in North Oxfordshire.". The Ironstone Benefice.
  3. {{NHLE
  4. "Butchers Arms, Balscote". [[Hook Norton Brewery]].
  5. "Balscote Village website".
  6. (21 October 2010). "Long fight ends as work begins". [[Johnston Press]].
  7. (3 June 2011). "Balscote, Oxfordshire opens village hall".
  8. "Balscote". Timberworks Europe.
  9. {{harvnb. O'Flanagan. 1870. (June 2019)
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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