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St Giles's Church, Tattenhoe

St Giles's, Tattenhoe
StGilesChurchTattenhoe1.JPG
The church from the south
51°59′52″N 0°47′38″W / 51.9978°N 0.7938°W / 51.9978; -0.7938Coordinates: 51°59′52″N 0°47′38″W / 51.9978°N 0.7938°W / 51.9978; -0.7938
Country United Kingdom
Denomination Church of England
Churchmanship Anglican/Ecumenical
Website www.wvep.org
History
Dedication St Giles
Architecture
Heritage designation Grade II* listed
Specifications
Capacity 55
Administration
Parish Watling Valley
Deanery Milton Keynes
Archdeaconry Buckingham
Diocese Oxford
Province Canterbury

St. Giles's Church is a small 16th century Church of England church in the estate of Tattenhoe, located to the west of Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire, England. It is of modest size but is a Grade 2* listed building.

The first St. Giles’s Church was built on this site around 1200 AD. The yew trees in the churchyard have been dated from this time and were probably planted at the time the first church was established. This makes them some 800 years old. The building you see today dates from circa 1538. It is the second church building on the site and was constructed using the stones from nearby Snelshall Priory, after the first St. Giles’s fell wholly into decay.

Beyond the churchyard in the meadow is the site of the lost village of Tattenhoe. The village disappeared without any records; the reason for its disappearance is not known.

After the Norman Conquest in 1066, land at Tattenhoe had been given by William the Conqueror to three of his Lords, Earl Hugh of Chester, Richard Ingania and Urse de Bersers. By 1167 ownership of both Tattenhoe and Snelshall had passed to Sybil d’Aungerville. She granted these lands at Snelshall to the Benedictine monks of Lavendon, to start a religious community - Snelshall Priory. Sybil d’Aungerville’s grandson Ralph Martel gave some more of his land at Tattenhoe in 1216 to the lands already given to Snelshall Priory. Over 100 donations were given to the Priory during the following 100 years, some of these large, including the donations of the fishponds around St. Giles’s.

Some of the stones were transported and used to rebuild St Giles’s Church. Parts of today’s St. Giles’s are still recognisable as part of an earlier building - including the archway of the main door and the base of the font.

For hundreds of years, until the late 1980s, the parish of Tattenhoe comprised only three buildings: the farmhouses of Tattenhoe Bare, Tattenhoe Hall and Howe Park Farms. St. Giles’s stood alone in the fields, surrounded by dense woods, fields, livestock and crops. For 460 years St Giles’s was kept open for worship by the families living at the three farms and by worshippers from neighbouring villages including Whaddon, Newton Longville, Shenley and Loughton. They walked across the fields on summer Sunday evenings to make sure the church stayed in use for worship and for future generations. The stained glass window in the church dates to 1919.


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