The village lies in a small hollow near the summit of the Mendip range of hills, at an elevation of 260 metres (850 ft) above sea-level, and has evidence of occupation since neolithic times.[2] There are remains of leadmining activities[3] and caves in the limestone beneath the village.
It is the venue for the annual Priddy Folk Festival.[4] The Sheep Fair,[5] was last held in 2013.[6]
Etymology
It is generally agreed among toponymic specialists that the first element of Priddy is most likely to be a British (ie pre-English) word, pridd, and various forms thereof, with a general sense of 'mud, earth, clay, soil'.[7] Despite many claims to the contrary, the second element of the toponym is entirely unknown, despite attempts to resolve it - this is in large measure due to the lack of reliable early spellings. Albert Thompson's meticulous deconstruction of the landscape archaeology of Priddy and its environs is, however, an extremely valuable, important and authoritative contribution to this debate, and to overall knowledge in this respect.[8] However, many years ago, A G C Turner suggested that Priddy contained a second pre-English element which gave a sense to the whole place-name of 'the earth house(s)'; but he did not develop his idea any further, or make any suggestion about what feature or features were being referenced.[9] Much more recently though, Andrew Breeze has taken up Turner's idea and suggested that the 'earth house(s)' might be a reference to the numerous Bronze Age barrows which lie close to Priddy, most notably the celebrated Nine Barrows, and the separate Ashen Hill Group.[10] British speakers of the early medieval period, prior to the widespread adoption of English in northern Somerset, would have known perfectly well that these were burial mounds, and may therefore have rationalised them as 'houses' of the dead. There certainly seems to have been a very similar kind of empathetic appreciation for prehistoric monuments of all kinds, among rather later, Anglo-Saxon folk.[11]
Lead was being worked as far back as 300 to 200 BC.[16] The area east and north-west of the village shows extensive patches of "gruffy ground". The word "gruffy" derives from the grooves that were formed where the lead ore was extracted from veins near the surface. The relatively easy opencast extraction of lead was a strong attraction for the Romans. Lead ingots found in the neighbourhood have been dated to AD 49.[17][18] The ruins of St Cuthbert's Leadworks which closed in 1908 can still be seen.[19][20] According to tradition Joseph of Arimathea and the young Jesus stayed at Priddy when they came to Somerset. It has been proposed that Joseph was a trader of Cornish tin and of the lead and copper of Somerset.[21]
Although the village is not mentioned in the Domesday Book it appears to be the subject of a lost Saxon charter of the late 7th or 8th century.[14] The parish was part of the hundred of Wells Forum.[22]
Since the 1920s, the kennels for the Mendip Farmers' Hunt fox hounds have been based near the village, but the hunt was planning to relocate them to Chewton Mendip,[23] a move which has faced significant local opposition.[24][25]
The group starts a number of fox hunts from the village green, including one on Boxing Day.[26] In 2014 a decision was made by Mendip District Council to allow the development of the kennels in the village.[27]
In April 2013 the stack of sheep hurdles on the green was set alight in an arson attack.[28] In July 2013, locals remade The Hurdles.
An annual Sheep Fair[5] began in the village in 1348, moving from Wells as a result of the Black Death. It was last held in 2013.[6] The parish council and sheep fair committee cancelled the 2014 event, describing it as unsustainable.[29] The parish council dissolved the organising Sheep Fair Committee in July 2016.[30]
Governance
The parish council has responsibility for local issues, including setting an annual precept (local rate) to cover the council's operating costs and producing annual accounts for public scrutiny. The parish council evaluates local planning applications and works with the local police, district council officers, and neighbourhood watch groups on matters of crime, security, and traffic. The parish council's role also includes initiating projects for the maintenance and repair of parish facilities, as well as consulting with the district council on the maintenance, repair, and improvement of highways, drainage, footpaths, public transport, and street cleaning. Conservation matters (including trees and listed buildings) and environmental issues are also the responsibility of the council.
The Church of St Lawrence dates from the 13th century, with some rebuilding in the 15th century and was restored in 1881–1888; it is a Grade I listed building.[32] The three bells in the church were augmented to five in 1997. The church includes a medieval altar frontal.[33]
On 29 October 2017 Metropolitan Seraphim (of the British Orthodox Church) consecrated Father David Seeds as Bishop David of Priddy.[34]
References
^"Priddy Parish". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 1 January 2014.
^Smith, A H (1956). English Place-Name Elements Part II: JAFN-YTRI (English Place-Name Society Volume 26 ed.). Cambridge University Press, for the English Place-Name Society. p. 73.
^Thompson, Albert (2011). "Praedium on Mendip?". In Lewis, Jodie (ed.). The Archaeology of Mendip: 500,000 Years of Continuity and Change. Oxford: Heritage: Oxbow Books Limited. pp. 201–256. ISBN9781905223282.
^Turner, A G C (1950). The Place-Names of North Somerset. Unpublished PhD thesis, University of Cambridge. pp. 101–102.
^Breeze, Andrew (2008). "Archaeology and the Name of Priddy, Somerset". Notes and Queries for Somerset and Dorset. 36: 220–221.
^Semple, Sarah (2013). Perceptions of the Prehistoric in Anglo-Saxon England: Religion, Ritual, and Rulership in the Landscape. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN9780198844112.
^Havinden, Michael. The Somerset Landscape. The making of the English landscape. London: Hodder and Stoughton. p. 47. ISBN0-340-20116-9.
^Dunning, Robert (1983). A History of Somerset. Chichester, West Sussex: Phillimore & Co. ISBN0-85033-461-6.