*** Welcome to piglix ***

Bulkington, Wiltshire

Bulkington
Christchurch, Bulkington - geograph.org.uk - 1437480.jpg
Christ Church
Bulkington is located in Wiltshire
Bulkington
Bulkington
Bulkington shown within Wiltshire
Population 285 
OS grid reference ST943583
Civil parish
  • Bulkington
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town Devizes
Postcode district SN10
Dialling code 01380
Police Wiltshire
Fire Dorset and Wiltshire
Ambulance South Western
EU Parliament South West England
UK Parliament
Website Parish Council
List of places
UK
England
Wiltshire
51°19′26″N 2°04′59″W / 51.324°N 2.083°W / 51.324; -2.083Coordinates: 51°19′26″N 2°04′59″W / 51.324°N 2.083°W / 51.324; -2.083

Bulkington is a village and a civil parish in Wiltshire, England. The village is about 4.5 miles (7.2 km) west of Devizes and a similar distance southeast of Melksham.

The northern boundary of the parish is the Summerham Brook, and the Semington Brook is the boundary to the west and south.

Bulkington was one of the villages featured in the 2003 BBC2 television documentary A Country Parish.

This brief history of Bulkington has been taken mainly from editions of the journal of the Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Society.

Excavations at Lawn Farm in 1994 have uncovered evidence of periodic occupation from the 12th century onwards, with a first mention in historical records in 1217 (77 1997). There is also physical evidence of pre-medieval human activity represented by a tiny assemblage of worked flint, possibly Mesolithic or Neolithic in date and a sherd of Roman pot (90 1997).

Aligned ENE-WSW and flanked by two brooks, Bulkington brook to the east and Semington Brook to the west, the village was initially formed within the manor of Edington. Edington Church contains a monument/tomb in the south transept, ascribed to Thomas Bulkington – rebus Boc-in-tun, the Boc signifying a beech tree (xlvii 1939). The addition of the –ton has also been attributed to an organised community that probably occupied pastured land after the Domesday Book was published in 1086, whose records suggest that the area where Bulkington lies was woodland (xlviii 1939).

It is feasible that Thomas Bulkington may have been the donor of the original manor circa 1244 (90 1997) situated opposite the present day church (linked with Manor Farm and the fieldworks behind it), and tithes of Bulkington before he joined the convent. His presence in the area is consolidated as a witness to the transfer of Keevil church to the monastery in 1393 (xlvii 1937; xx1982; xxxii 1902).

The Lambeth Parliamentary Surveys of 1649 state that Bulkington was part of Keevil parish, paying tithes to Holy Trinity of Winchester. The monastery had a manor, a farm, customary rents and a rectorial tithe (xx 1982). Throughout time, Bulkington has had links with local gentry such as the Fitzlans, Earls of Arundel, the Stourton family, Richard Vere, the Earl of Oxford and Thomas Barkesdale (xx 1882) .


...
Wikipedia

...