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Broughton, Oxfordshire

Village in Oxfordshire, England


Village in Oxfordshire, England

FieldValue
official_nameBroughton
static_image_nameBroughton StMaryV south wide.jpg
static_image_captionSt Mary the Virgin parish church
static_image_2_nameBroughton_castle_garden.jpg
static_image_2_captionFormal gardens at Broughton Castle
coordinates
os_grid_referenceSP4238
label_positionbottom
area_total_km23.94
population286
population_ref(2011 Census)
civil_parishBroughton
shire_districtCherwell
shire_countyOxfordshire
regionSouth East England
countryEngland
constituency_westminsterBanbury
post_townBanbury
postcode_districtOX15
postcode_areaOX
dial_code01295

Broughton is a village and civil parish in northern Oxfordshire, England, about 2+1/2 mi southwest of Banbury. The 2011 Census recorded the parish's population as 286.

Manor

The Domesday Book of 1086 records the place-name as Brohtune and an episcopal register from 1224 records it as Broctona. The name is derived from Old English and in this case means tūn ("farm") on a brōc ("brook").

Before the Norman Conquest of 1066 Thorgautr Lagr held the manor of Broughton. By 1086 the parish of Broughton was part of the hundred of Bloxham, held by tenant-in-chief Berengarii de Todeni (Berengar de Tosny), The Domesday Book records that in 1086 Broughton parish had two watermills. By 1444 there were at least three, one of which was a fulling mill. By 1685 there was a second fulling mill, and both mills supplied the local woollen industry. Fulling and cloth-dyeing remained local industries until early in the 20th century.

Broughton Castle is a 14th- to 16th-century country house and the ancestral seat of the Lords Saye and Sele (the Fiennes family). It is a Scheduled Monument and Grade I listed building.

In the 17th century Broughton's agriculture was mostly pasture for cattle and sheep, which has given to the parish such field names as Dairy Ground, Grazing Ground and New Close Pasture. Improved crop rotation in the agricultural revolution increased arable farming in the parish, with crops being diversified in the 18th century to include clover, flax, hops, sainfoin and woad. Some of these crops have given place names to the parish such as Sandfine Wood, Sandfine Road and Woadmill Farm. Woad was still grown in 1827, when it was used locally for dyeing wool.

Parish church

The Church of England parish church of St Mary the Virgin is in the grounds of Broughton Castle. The church was built about 1300 in a style that is transitional from Early English to Decorated Gothic. Clerestories were added to the south aisle late in the 14th century and to the nave in the 15th century. The church was restored in 1877–80 under the direction of George Gilbert Scott. It is a Grade I listed building. Broughton Rectory was rebuilt in 1694. It was altered three times in the 19th century: firstly by Richard Pace of Lechlade in 1808, and then with extensions by SP Cockerell in 1820 and HJ Underwood in 1842.

The church has 19th-century stained glass by Lavers and Westlake, Kempe, Clayton and Bell, Burlison and Grylls as well as some Munich glass.ref name="listing"/

Amenities

Broughton has a pub, the Saye and Sele Arms.

References

Sources

References

  1. "Broughton Parish".
  2. "Broughton". Open Domesday.
  3. Keats-Rohan, Katharine SB. (July 1998). "Belvoir: The Heirs of Robert and Berengar de Tosny". Prosopon Newsletter.
  4. {{harvnb. Lobel. Crossley. 1969
  5. {{NHLE
  6. {{NHLE
  7. Broughton has a pair of [[Gothic Revival architecture
  8. {{NHLE
  9. {{harvnb. Sherwood. Pevsner. 1974
  10. {{NHLE
  11. [http://www.sayeandselearms.co.uk/ Saye and Sele Arms]
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