Landkey
Landkey | |
Devon | |
---|---|
Landkey from Codden Hill | |
Location | |
Grid reference: | SS596311 |
Location: | 51°3’46"N, 4°0’26"W |
Data | |
Postcode: | EX32 |
Local Government | |
Council: | North Devon |
Landkey is a village in the north of Devon; a place with a parish population recorded at 1,734 by the 2011 Census. It is to be found three miles from Barnstaple, the nearest town.
History and legend
Local legend has it that Landkey was founded by Leon Freeman in 1586, as a settlement to escape from the Spanish Armada. This supposition is now categorised as a 'mistruth legend'. It is now widely accepted that the name of the village, Landkey, is Cornish, or rather Old Welsh in origin, from Llan Cei; the 'Church of [St] Kea': Kea and a brother monk, Filia, are known to have worked together in the evangelisation of these parts, probably in the late 5th century. Some six milies away Filia's name is contained in the village of 'Filleigh'. Today, the dedication of both parish churches is to St Paul.
St Paul's Church
Landkey church, dedicated to St Paul, is an attractive building, entirely late 15th century, except for the chancel which was rebuilt in 1870. The interior is plastered and whitened throughout, with ceiled and bossed roofs, and possesses an elegant early perpendicular font dating from c.1400. The North aisle contains three stone effigies of the Beaupels, who held the manor of Landkey under the Bishop of Exeter.
The small south transept is the Acland Chapel, and contains a fine coloured monument to Sir Arthur Acland (d.1610) and his wife. The Aclands, one of the most notable of Devon families, originated within the parish at Acland Barton, from which they took their name in the time of King Henry II (1154-1189). They continued to own it until 1945, when Sir Richard Acland sold it to the tenant. Sir Arthur Acland (d.1610) purchased the estate of Killerton some 32 miles to the south, where the family later were seated. The parish now forms part of the "Benefice of Swimbridge with West Buckland and Landkey".
Mazzard Fruit
Landkey is noted for its variety of sweet cherry called Mazzard fruit which was discovered by local farmers in the early 1800s. Landkey Parish Council have rescued Mazzard trees from the brink of extinction; they were once common in North Devon, but had almost died out. The parish council won a £35,000 matching grant through the Countryside Agency's Millennium Green project to pave the way for creating a two acre orchard as part of a wider Millennium Green project.
All the two-foot high saplings were bought from Thornhayes Nursery at Cullompton, who also grafted the mazzard buds onto infant trees. All the mazzards - prunus avium - in varieties Greenstem Black, Black Bottler, Dun Small Black and Hannaford are thriving on the six acre green.[1]
Venn Quarry
Venn Quarry is located in open countryside two miles south-east of Barnstaple. It lies to the north of Codden Hill, equidistant between the villages of Bishops Tawton and Landkey. It produces a high PSV gritstone, for which there is an increasingly important market for wearing courses in road making and repair. In addition, the quarry also produces aggregates for the construction industry and materials for a concrete batching plant located at the eastern end of the site. Quarrying for gritstone commenced at Venn in the 1930s, which predated the introduction of the Town and Country Planning Act 1947 and it has been in continuous operation since. There have been a number of planning permissions granted for extensions to both the working area and for mineral waste tipping.
Venn Quarry was mothballed on 8 September 2006.
Outside links
("Wikimedia Commons" has material about Landkey) |