Bletchingdon

Bletchingdon (also known as Bletchington ) is a village and civil parish 2 mi north of Kidlington and 6 mi southwest of Bicester in Oxfordshire, England.

Manor and estates
The Domesday Book records that in 1086 Robert D'Oyly held a manor of eight hides at Bletchingdon and his tenant was one Gilbert. Gilbert was an ancestor of Roger d'Amory, who was Lord of the Manor of Bletchingdon until he died in prison in 1322.

In about 1139 Robert d'Amory gave 50 acre at Bletchingdon to Godstow Abbey, and Walter Pery gave the abbey one yardland and 10 acre at Bletchingdon. Godstow retained this estate until it surrendered all its property to the Crown in the Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1539.

Before 1151 Ralph Fitzniel and his mother Agnes gave half a hide at Bletchingdon to the Knights Templar preceptory at Cowley. The preceptory later moved to Sandford-on-Thames. In the reign of Edward II the Templars were suppressed and in 1513 the Knights Hospitaller held the same half hide at Bletchingdon.

By 1187 Ralph d'Amory had granted two virgates at Bletchingdon to Osney Abbey. In the 13th century other benefactors gave lands at Bletchingdon to the abbey, and in 1291 they were assessed as part of its Hampton Gay estate.

In the 14th century Bletchingdon manor house was the chief seat of Roger Damory and his wife Elizabeth de Clare (died 1360), foundress of Clare College, Cambridge.

Bletchingdon Park
Bletchingdon's medieval manor house was rebuilt by Sir Thomas Coghill in about 1630. It was fortified and garrisoned by 200 Royalist troops in the Civil War, before being surrendered to Parliamentarian troops in 1645. John Coghill sold it to Viscount Valentia in 1716.

The present house at Bletchingdon Park is a Palladian country house next to the parish church that was designed by James Lewis and built in 1782 for Arthur Annesley, 5th Earl of Anglesey. It is a Grade II* listed building.

The estate remained in the Valentia family until 1948, when Lord Valentia sold it to the Hon. William Astor, who sold it in 1953 to the Hon. Robin Cayzer, later Baron Rotherwick. In 1990 it was bought by Dateline entrepreneur John Patterson who then sold it on and moved to Chesterton Manor. In 1993 Dr. Michael Peagram, a chemicals industrialist and philanthropist, bought the estate and had the house historically restored. In 2012 the 22600 sqft house was offered for sale for £20 million.

Parish church
The Church of England parish church of Saint Giles includes traces of Norman architecture. Its Early English Gothic chancel is slightly later, built in the 13th century. Charles Buckeridge designed the north aisle, which was added probably in 1869. The church was heavily restored to Buckeridge's designs in 1878. It is a Grade II* listed building.

The west tower has a ring of six bells. Robert and William Cor of Aldbourne, Wiltshire cast the tenor bell in 1710. Edward Hemins of Bicester cast the second bell in 1738. Matthew III Bagley of Chacombe, Northamptonshire cast the fifth bell in 1774. James Barwell of Birmingham cast the third and fourth bells in 1877. The Whitechapel Bell Foundry cast the treble bell in 1998. The church has a Sanctus bell, also cast by James Barwell in 1877.

St. Giles' is now part of the Benefice of Akeman, which includes the parishes of Chesterton, Hampton Gay, Kirtlington, Middleton Stoney, Wendlebury and Weston-on-the-Green.

Economic and social history
An open field system of farming prevailed in the parish until 1622. In the 13th and 14th centuries there were two fields: East Field and West Field. By 1539 it had been reorganised as a more efficient three-field system with the creation of South Field, apparently formed out of Breadcroft and part of East Field. In 1622 Bletchingdon's common lands – about 500 acre of arable land and about 600 acre of heath – were enclosed by agreement between the Lord of the Manor, the Rector and the tenants. This is the earliest recorded instance of enclosure in Oxfordshire by common consent, and it predates by more than a century the first use of an inclosure act in Oxfordshire, which was at Mixbury in 1729–30.

Bletchingdon village was originally built around a green, but the houses on the north side were pulled down when Bletchingdon Park was extended. The earliest known record of a public house in the parish dates from 1616. By the 1670s there was one called the Angel and Crown. In 1703 Bletchingdon had three pubs: the Green Man, the Red Lion and the Swan. The Red Lion survived until 1951, when it lost its licence.

Bletchingdon parish includes the hamlet of Enslow just over 1 mi west of the village. In 1788 the Oxford Canal reached Enslow, bringing much cheaper coal from the English Midlands to the area. From 1845 the Oxford and Rugby Railway was built through Enslow, where Bletchington railway station was built. British Railways closed the station in 1964.

Amenities
Bletchingdon has one public house, The Blacks Head Inn, which was built late in the 18th century. This closed in 2015.

The parish has a Church of England primary school.

The village has a silver band, which in 2005 qualified for the National Brass Band Championships in Harrogate for the first time. The Band again qualified for the Finals in 2012, this time in Cheltenham.