Amesbury (/ˈeɪmzbəri/) is a town and civil parish in Wiltshire, England. It is known for the prehistoric monument of Stonehenge which is within the parish. The town is claimed to be the oldest occupied settlement in Great Britain, having been first settled around 8820 BC.[2] The parish includes the hamlets of Ratfyn and West Amesbury, and part of Boscombe Down military airfield.
Etymology
The derivation of the name of the town is uncertain. It may derive from an Anglo-Saxon named Ambre, or from the Old Englishamore-burh meaning 'fortification frequented by buntings or/and Yellowhammers'.[3] It has also been suggested that the name is derived from Ambrosius Aurelianus, leader of Romano-British resistance to Saxon invasions in the 5th century.[4]
Geography
Amesbury is located in southern Wiltshire, 7 miles (11 km) north-northeast of Salisbury on the A345. It sits in the River Avon valley on the southern fringes of Salisbury Plain and has historically been considered an important river crossing area on the road from London to Warminster and Exeter. This has continued into the present with the building of the A303 across the Avon next to the town. Originally the town developed around the water meadows next to several bends in the river, but in time has spread onto the valley hillsides and absorbed part of the military airfield at Boscombe Down.[5]
During the Iron Age a large hill fort now known as Vespasian's Camp was built alongside the Avenue and overlooking the River Avon. The fort could easily have catered for up to 1000 people, and was probably surrounded by smaller settlements and farming communities.[9]
Roman remains are poorly documented at Amesbury, but excavations have revealed Roman structures in the Stonehenge landscape, and Wessex Archaeology have discovered a large Roman graveyard in the area of the Amesbury Archer burial.[10] It is likely that there was a large Romano-British settlement overlooking the River Avon at this point.[11]
If this is the case he is likely to have used the hill fort as a stronghold.[citation needed] It is possible that an order of monks established a monastery in the area that was destroyed by the Saxons before they settled the area in the 7th century.[12]
Amesbury is also associated with the Arthurian legend: the convent to which Guinevere retired was said to have been the one at Amesbury.[17] This legend has its origins in the world of Middle English Arthurian romance: the Stanzaic Morte Arthur (c. 1350-1400) is the earliest text to claim that Guinevere retired to Amesbury, rather than to Caerleon, as had previously been claimed by the historian Geoffrey of Monmouth.[18] The claim was repeated in Sir Thomas Malory's Le_Morte_d'Arthur.[18] In 1542, the antiquarian John Leland took things further, stating that Guinevere had actually been buried at Amesbury before being disinterred and translated to Glastonbury Abbey to lie beside her husband, King Arthur.[19] The tradition of Guinevere's Amesbury burial came to a head in the early 1600s, when an ancient noblewoman's grave was discovered during renovation work at the old Abbey site, then in the hands of the Earls of Hertford.[20]Inigo Jones, the lead architect, was convinced that the grave was Guinevere's, and in the decades after the discovery visitors flocked to Amesbury to see the grave for themselves, where a plaque had apparently been erected to mark the location.[21]
Modern history
On John Speed's map of Wiltshire (1611), the town's name is spelt both Amesbury (for the hundred) and Ambersbury (for the town itself).
In 1824 Sir Edmund Antrobus acquired the estate and, finding the mansion in poor repair, had it rebuilt in 1834–1840 to designs of Thomas Hopper.[23] In 1915 Lord Antrobus sold the grounds – including Stonehenge – to private bidders, although the mansion remained in Antrobus family hands until 1979.[25] The house is now operated as a nursing home.[26]
In 1677, John Rose, gentleman, founded two schools at Amesbury, a grammar school for teaching grammar, writing, and ciphering to twenty children born in the parish, and an "English school" to prepare twenty children of poor parents for the grammar school. By a decree in Chancery of 1831, the freedom of the grammar school was extended to children of "mechanics, artisans, and small tradesmen".[27] The grammar school was closed in 1899, and the children were transferred to a National School.[28]
Recent history
With the establishment of the military Aeroplane and Armament Experimental Establishment at Boscombe Down in 1939, Amesbury began to expand. As it lies within the A303 commuter belt, Amesbury has seen substantial developments on the land between the old town centre and Boscombe Down. Several new housing estates have been completed, and the most recent one – Archers Gate – has taken its name from the discovery of the Amesbury Archer. At the Boscombe Down junction of the A303, a mixed business development known as Solstice Park has been built.
On 30 June 2018, two British nationals were poisoned using Novichoknerve agents before being found unconscious at a property in Amesbury; one of them, Dawn Sturgess, later died.[29] Almost four months earlier, the same nerve agents were used in the poisoning of Sergei and Yulia Skripal in nearby Salisbury. In 2020 it was reported that the Amesbury property would be demolished.[30]
Amesbury Bus Station closed in January 2014 along with the bus station in nearby Salisbury as a cost-cutting measure,[35] but Salisbury Reds services still stop in the town. Stagecoach and Salisbury Reds jointly operate a frequent Salisbury-Amesbury-Tidworth-Andover service,[36] and National Express provide a service to London. Salisbury Reds also operate the X4 Salisbury-Amesbury-Larkhill and the X5 Salisbury-Amesbury-Swindon.
The church of St Mary and St Melor, the town's parish church, is Grade I listed.[37] Its nave is from the early 12th century and much of the rest is 13th-century. The large size of the building may reflect Amesbury's early royal connections, or a link to Amesbury Abbey; it is thought that the abbey had its own church until its dissolution in the 16th century, but no evidence of that church survives above ground.[15]
Amesbury Methodist Church was built in 1900, replacing an 1816 chapel.[38][39] Christ the King Catholic church opened in 1985, replacing a 1933 building on a different site.[40][41] Amesbury Baptist Church was built in 1997.[42][43]
Notable buildings
The mansion known as Amesbury Abbey, standing in parkland close to the site of the former abbey, is Grade I listed.[23] It was built in 1834–1840 by architect Thomas Hopper for Sir Edmund Antrobus, and replaced a similar house built in 1661 by John Webb for the 2nd Duke of Somerset. Features in the grounds include an ornamental bridge rebuilt in 1755.[44] The house is now operated as a nursing home. Diana's House[45] and Kent House[46] are flint and stone gatehouses to the property from the early 17th century; both are Grade II* listed and are irregular in plan with a high stair-tower, leading Pevsner to call them "curious".[47]
The Red House on Salisbury Road is a five-bay former farmhouse, rebuilt in red brick c.1700[48] and described by Pevsner as "the best older house ... with a pretty early-19th-century cast-iron porch".[47] This is the former home of Francis Stephen Long, Esquire, whose wife, Ann, remained at the Red House until her death in 1856.[49] Nearby on Salisbury Road, Antrobus House was built in 1924–5 under a bequest of Lady Florence Antrobus (1856–1923) as a memorial to her son Edmund, who died at war in Belgium in 1914.[50] Although intended as a village hall, Historic England state it is "built to a high standard". In handmade brick, the tall five-bay central block contains the hall and has substantial wings on both sides.[51] The low roadside wall in flint and stone has an overall length of 43m and a central iron gate set back from the road; the tall brick gate piers have stone vases.[52]
West Amesbury House is from the 15th century and is Grade I listed; in flint and stone chequer, it was remodelled in the early 20th century by Detmar Blow.[53]
The town centre has a hotel and restaurant, the Antrobus Arms (18th century and early 19th),[58] and four pubs: The George Hotel (originally c. 1560 with later alterations),[59] The Kings Arms (mid 18th century),[60] The New Inn (early 19th)[61] and The Bell (1908).[62]
Antrobus House is a venue for community organisations, weddings and other events.[63]
Although Stonehenge falls within the parish of Amesbury, the town does not directly benefit from the monument's fame.[65] However, Amesbury has appeared in the public eye on its own merits in the past.
In 2002, the discovery of the richest Bronze Age burial site yet found in Britain was made at Amesbury. The remains of two men of apparently aristocratic rank were accompanied by over 100 objects including arrowheads, copper knives and the earliest worked gold in the country. The occupant of the more richly furnished grave has become known as the "Amesbury Archer".[8]
The town is linked to the Arthurian legend as it is popularly believed that Guinevere retired to the original convent at Amesbury after leaving Arthur. Legend holds that she is buried in the grounds of the former Abbey.[66]
From 3–5 May 1965, The Beatles stayed at The Antrobus Hotel during the filming of Help! on Salisbury Plain. The Antrobus Hotel and the former Plaza Cinema were both used as locations for the filming of a BBC Miss Marple mystery.[67]
The Salisbury Poisonings, a three-part dramatisation of the 2018 poisonings in Salisbury and Amesbury, was broadcast on BBC One in June 2020.[68]
^"Amesbury". Wiltshire Community History. Wiltshire Council. Retrieved 9 June 2021.
^"Our heritage". Amesbury Abbey Group. Archived from the original on 16 June 2020. Retrieved 16 June 2020.
^"Amesbury – Rose's Schools" in Public Charities: Analytical digest of the Reports made by the Commissioners of inquiry into charities. Digest of schools and charities for education (W. Clowes & Son, 1842), p. 127
^"Amesbury Community Area". Joint Strategic Assessments for Wiltshire. Wiltshire Council. Archived from the original on 21 August 2015. Retrieved 30 August 2015.
Bateman, Mary (2022). "A Grave Discovery? Guinevere's Death and Burial at Amesbury in Medieval and Early Modern Tradition". In Coldham-Fussell, Victoria; Edlich-Muth, Miriam; Ward, Renée (eds.). The Arthurian World. London: Routledge. pp. 413–28.