Bemerton

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Bemerton has claim to fame as the parish where George Herbert was rector and where he is buried.

Bemerton, once a separate village to the west of Salisbury, Wiltshire, England, is now virtually a suburb of that city.

There are three parish churches ranging from the 13th century, St Andrew’s, in which Herbert served and is buried, to St John’s, a Victorian construction, and St Michael’s, built in 1957.

[edit] Famous Inhabitants

The poet George Herbert, the most famous, was Rector of St Andrew’s from 1630 until his death in 1633. John Norris who was rector from 1692 until 1711 was a more famous poet during his lifetime than Herbert was in his, although his work is now largely forgotten. William Coxe (1748 – 1828), the rector from 1788 – 1828 wrote travel books, biographies of Sir Robert Walpole and others, and a history of the county of Montgomery.