The place was first mentioned in 1180 as Chiefleswelle. The name is of Old English origin, and appears to mean 'the stream of a man called Cifel'.[1] An older form of the name is Childsworth, and the place is mentioned by that name in the poem Thyrsis by Matthew Arnold. Arnold's "signal elm" is in a field nearby, bought by the Oxford Preservation Trust from All Souls College, Oxford in 2009.[2]
The remains of a Roman villa have been found nearby.[3]
Chilswell House, on the edge of Boars Hill, was built in 1907 to be the home of the poet Robert Bridges,[4] the writer Monica Bridges and their three children.[5]
Chilswell Valley (also known as Happy Valley), between Chilswell and South Hinksey, is a nature reserve managed by Oxford City Council.[6]
References
^Gelling, M. (1974) Place-Names of Berkshire p.446