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Somerford Keynes
Village in Gloucestershire, England
Village in Gloucestershire, England
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| official_name | Somerford Keynes |
| country | England |
| os_grid_reference | SU019952 |
| coordinates | |
| post_town | CIRENCESTER |
| postcode_area | GL |
| dial_code | 01285 |
| constituency_westminster | South Cotswolds |
| civil_parish | Somerford Keynes |
| static_image_name | Somerford Keynes church.JPG |
| region | South West England |
| shire_county | Gloucestershire |
| static_image_caption | All Saints parish church |
| postcode_district | GL7 |
| website |
Somerford Keynes ( ; ) is a village and civil parish in the Cotswold district of Gloucestershire, England, close to the River Thames and about 5 miles (8 km) from its source. It lies on the boundary with Wiltshire, midway between Cirencester, Swindon and Malmesbury. The parish population at the 2011 census was 479, and a 2019 estimate put it at 558. The parish includes the village of Shorncote.
History
A series of salvage excavations at Spratsgate Lane in 1986–1988 revealed part of an Iron Age and Roman settlement. The earliest finds were a series of curvilinear enclosures from the early 1st to the early 2nd century CE, which may have formed part of a farmstead. A religious focus is also suggested by an unusually large number of coins and brooches, which may have been votive offerings. Stone sculptural fragments were found of an eagle and a shield. These could belong to a representation of the Roman Capitoline triad (the gods Jupiter, Juno and Minerva), which again points to a formal religious presence.
The village first appears in writing in AD 685, in a charter confirming a gift of 40 hides of land by King Ethelred's nephew Bertwald to St Aldhelm, first abbot of Malmesbury. The manor was held in 1211 by William de Cahaignes, an ancestor of the Keynes family.
The Manor House is a Grade II listed building. Its core is probably from the late 15th century or early 16th; it was extended to the east in the 1630s, and a north-west wing was added in 1924.
Parish church
The Church of England parish church of All Saints is a Grade II* listed building, built on Saxon foundations from about 685. It was largely rebuilt in the early 13th century. The tower was added in 1710–1713 and restored in 1875. The north aisle contains a large black-and-white marble monument with a reclining effigy of Robert Straung (Strange), who died in 1654. Several monuments in the churchyard listed by Historic England commemorate the Ferrebec family, William Hales (died 1806), a member of the Harrison family, two members of the Davis family, and others.
Governance
Somerford Keynes has a parish council. It is represented by a county councillor for South Cerney Division and by a district councillor for Kemble ward of Cotswold District Council.
In 1894 the parish of Shorncott was abolished and merged with Somerford Keynes.
Amenities
The nearest railway station is at Kemble, 2+1/2 mi away. It has trains about once an hour to Gloucester, Cheltenham and Swindon. There are three or four daytime, weekday buses to Malmesbury and Cirencester.
The Thames Path, a long-distance footpath, passes through the parish, which lies in the western section of the Cotswold Water Park.
Elemental Sculpture Park is an annual seasonal art exhibition in Somerford Keynes, which in 2016 featured about 140 works by 50 sculptors.
Wildlife
The first beavers to be born in Britain for 400 years appeared at Lower Mill Estate in 2008.
Literary allusion
Somerford Keynes is the name of a character in the series of Rutshire Chronicles books by Jilly Cooper.
References
Notes
References
- "Parish population 2011".
- [https://www.citypopulation.de/en/uk/southwestengland/gloucestershire/E34001161__somerford_keynes/ City Population site. Retrieved 24 November 2020.]
- "Parish Council".
- "Cirencester Registration District". UKBMD.
- yip, Ann. (5 August 2016). "Elemental Sculpture Park in Somerford Keynes features 140 works of art by 50 sculptors".
- Christopher Winn: ''I Never Knew That about the River Thames'' (London: Ebury Press, 2010), p. 5.
- (30 April 2002). "How Jilly stays on top". Telegraph.
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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