Bonchurch

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bonchurch is a small village to the East of Ventnor, on the southern part of the Isle of Wight, England. It is situated on The Undercliff, which itself is subject to regular landslips. It is one of the oldest settlements on the Isle of Wight.[1][2]

[edit] History

The presence of a water spring is believed to be the reason why humans first settled in the area where present-day Bonchurch is located.[1][2] A prehistoric race lived in the area[2] around the Undercliff, land which was wild forest.[1] Evidence has also been found showing that men that lived during the Stone Age had lived near to the water spring.[1] Five burial mounds have been discovered at St. Boniface Down.[1] Evidence has also been discovered showing that the Romans[2] established a settlement in the area.[1]

The Saxon patron saint, St. Boniface, is believed to have visited the Isle of Wight, and possibly the area where Bonchurch is now located, in the 8th century. Legend states that monks from Lyra in Normandy landed at Monks Bay, near to modern-day Bonchurch, and erected a building in dedication to St. Boniface. This building could be the wooden building which is believed to have existed in the 9th century where the Old Church now stands.

The first documented proof of the existence of Bonchurch is found in the Domesday Book.[1][2][3] In the Domesday Book, the settlement was called Bonecerce.[3] 'Cerce' is Anglo-Saxon for 'church', whilst 'Bone' is presumed to have been derived from St. Boniface.[3]

Bonchurch has two churches.[1] The oldest one is called the Old Church.[1] The Domesday Book recorded its existence.[1]

In July 1545, the Battle of Bonchurch was fought.[4] 500 French soldiers had landed at the coast near Bonchurch, one of three landings that took place on the coastline of the Isle of Wight by French soldiers.[4] 300 Isle of Wight militiamen engaged the French forces, and the militiamen won the engagement.[4] Some accounts state that local women participated in the battle by firing arrows at the French soldiers.[4] The victory is considered to have decisively stopped the French invasion of the Isle of Wight.[4]

Soon after the battle, a number of men from the French fleet which had retreated from the Solent after the Battle of the Solent landed on the coast near Bonchurch.[4] The men were engaged in a military action by English soldiers whilst they were on a mission to collect fresh water on the island. [4] A French senior officer, Chevalier D'Aux, was killed. His body was burried in Bonchurch, but would be exhumed and taken back to France in 1548 after the war between England and France had ceased. [4]

The poet Algernon Swinburne is buried at Bonchurch and his grave is the subject of a poem by Thomas Hardy. He had an athiest funeral which was picketted in protest by his relatives.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Goodwin, Bonchurch from A-Z, 8.
  2. ^ a b c d e WightStay, <http://www.wightstay.co.uk/context/bonch.html>. Retrieved on 10 February 2008 
  3. ^ a b c Brett, Bonchurch, 1.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Goodwin, Bonchurch from A-Z, 7.

[edit] Sources

  • Goodwin, John. Bonchurch from A-Z. Bonchurch: The Bonchurch Trading Company, 1992. ISBN 873009 003
  • Brett, Peter. Bonchurch. Bonchurch: Bonchurch Parochial Church Council.


Articles and Categories about the Isle of Wight, England The Isle of Wight

Category:Isle of Wight | Category:Buildings and structures on the Isle of Wight | Dinosaurs of the Isle of Wight | Education on the Isle of Wight | History of the Isle of Wight | List of Isle of Wight people | List of civil parishes in the Isle of Wight | List of places on the Isle of Wight | Politics of the Isle of Wight | Category:Visitor attractions on the Isle of Wight | Category:Geography of the Isle of Wight | Category:Railway stations on the Isle of Wight| Category:Heritage railway stations on the Isle of Wight