Meonstoke

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Meonstoke
Hampshire

St Andrew's church, Meonstoke
Location
Grid reference: SU612203
Location: 50°58’44"N, 1°7’39"W
Data
Population: 645  (2001)
Post town: Winchester
Postcode: SO32
Dialling code: 01489
Local Government
Council: Winchester
Parliamentary
constituency:
Meon Valley

Meonstoke is a village in Hampshire, in the Meon Valley where it cuts through the Middle Chalk of the South Downs. Old Winchester Hill is at the edge of the parish to the east.

The village sits on the eastern bank of the River Meon. On the northern part of the western bank is Corhamptonm and the A32 crosses the river between the two villages. On the southern bank is Droxford. Soberton lies to the south, Hambledon to the east and Exton to the north.

History

Flint implements found near Old Winchester Hill suggest that the area that is now the parish of Meonstoke was inhabited over 20,000 years ago. Later, in Neolithic times a roadway developed along the South Downs, passing south of Old Winchester Hill and crossing the River Meon at Exton. There is a Neolithic stone barrow on the southern slopes of Old Winchester Hill. Also on the Hill are eight Bronze Age barrows. Old Winchester Hill is the site of one of a chain of five Iron Age forts along the South Hampshire Ridgeway.[1]

Roman remains have been found in the Meon Valley and during the 1980s, archaeologists uncovered parts of a Roman building in the village. Sections of the building's façade are now on display in the British Museum.[2]

The 'Meonware', a Jutish tribe settled in the Meon Valley in the 6th century, but the extend to which the village is a legacy of this tribe cannot be said.

It is possible that Borough English or ultimogeniture the tradition of inheritance by the last-born of a parent's estate, which was recorded in the village as late as 1801, began with the Meonware, as it is also known in the Kent, which was a Jutish kingdom.[1]

Menestoche appears in the Domesday Book of 1086, with 28 heads of families listed, suggesting a possible population of 140.[1]

In the 13th century, Meonstoke was granted a weekly market, suggesting the importance of the village at the time.[1]

A national school was built in the village in 1842.

The former Meon Valley Railway passed to the east of the village but the planned station and yard at Meonstoke were never built. The route is now the Meon Valley Railway Line Trail, which can be joined here.

Church

The parish church, the Church of St Andrew is is a Grade II listed building. It dates from the 13th century, with a later tower, probably 15th century with early 20th-century repairs.[3] These included the addition in 1906 of a memorial window by Mary Lowndes, a leading light in the Arts and Crafts Movement.[4]

A church was mentioned in the Domesday Book, but the first mention of a rector is found in 1262.

About the village

The great hoiuse of the village is Meonstoke House, a Grade II listed building. It is described as "Late C18, with mid C19 extensions at each side...[and a] C20 porch of classical style".[5]

A June 2020 report provided more specifics, some years after a restoration: "The house was built in the late 18th century, with north and south wings added half-way through the 20th century. .. The exterior is effortlessly Georgian, the interiors have been sympathetically modernised". The large greenhouse also appears to be of a Georgian style.[6]

The property, with 34 acres of gardens and paddocks, was sold in 2020.[7]

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Meonstoke)

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Collins FB and Hurst JC Meonstoke and Soberton Winton Publications, Winchester, 1978
  2. British Museum Highlights
  3. A History of the County of Hampshire - Volume 3 pp 254-257: Parishes: Meonstoke (Victoria County History)
  4. Chris Maxse (2004). "St Andrew's, Meonstoke". http://www.bridgechurches.org.uk/churches/st-andrews-church-meonstoke/. Retrieved 9 February 2016. 
  5. National Heritage List 1095593: Meonstoke House (Grade II listing)
  6. A simply magnificent Hampshire house with huge rooms, immaculate gardens and everything a sportsman could desire
  7. Eight of the biggest country house sales in Britain in 2020