Tollard Royal

{{Short description|Village in Wiltshire, England}}

{{Use British English|date=August 2020}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2020}}

{{Infobox UK place

| official_name = Tollard Royal

| static_image_name = The Church of St Peter ad Vincula, Tollard Royal - geograph.org.uk - 855355.jpg

| static_image_caption = St Peter ad Vincula parish church

| coordinates = {{coord|50.960|-2.081|type:city(100)_region:GB-WIL|display=inline,title}}

| os_grid_reference = ST9417

| label_position = top

| population = 115

| population_ref = (2011){{cite web|website=Wiltshire Community History|title=Census: Tollard Royal|url=https://apps.wiltshire.gov.uk/communityhistory/Census?communityId=227|publisher=Wiltshire Council|access-date=6 August 2020}}

| civil_parish = Tollard Royal

| unitary_england = Wiltshire

| lieutenancy_england = Wiltshire

| region = South West England

| country = England

| post_town = Salisbury

| postcode_district = SP5

| postcode_area = SP

| dial_code = 01725

| constituency_westminster = Salisbury

| website = {{URL|https://tollardroyal.org/}}

}}

Tollard Royal is a village and civil parish on Cranborne Chase, Wiltshire, England. The parish is on Wiltshire's southern boundary with Dorset and the village is {{convert|6|mi|km|0}} southeast of the Dorset town of Shaftesbury, on the B3081 road{{Cite web|date=June 2015|title=B3081 Historic Landscape Appraisal|url=https://cranbornechase.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/B3081HistoricLandscapeStudy.pdf|access-date=15 August 2020|website=Cranborne Chase AONB|pages=3, 9}} between Shaftesbury and Sixpenny Handley.

History

Evidence of prehistoric occupation in the area includes a bowl barrow, reduced by ploughing, in the west of the parish on Woodley Down.{{National Heritage List for England|num=1020465|desc=Bowl barrow on Woodley Down|access-date= 28 July 2021}} Nearby is a linear earthwork straddling the county border,{{National Heritage List for England|num=1020728|desc=Linear boundary and section of Roman road|access-date= 28 July 2021|fewer-links=yes}} which is truncated by the Roman road from Badbury to Bath; a separate 480m section of the road survives as earthworks, with the flint road surface visible in places.{{National Heritage List for England|num=1020466|desc=Section of Roman road|access-date= 28 July 2021|fewer-links=yes}} On Berwick Down in the north of the parish a late Iron Age farmstead was replaced by a Romano-British settlement.{{National Heritage List for England|num=1020964|desc=A complex of Iron Age and Romano-British settlement on Berwick Down|access-date= 28 July 2021|fewer-links=yes}}

Domesday Book in 1086 recorded 31 households at Tollard. Much of the land was owned by Aiulf, whose other estates included Farnham in Dorset, immediately to the south.{{OpenDomesday|ST9417|tollard-royal|Tollard [Royal]}} This was later reflected in the shape of the ancient parish, with land on both sides of the Wiltshire/Dorset border. The land in Dorset – including the hamlet of Tollard Farnham, and much of Farnham village but not its church – was merged in 1885 into Farnham civil parish.{{cite web|author-last1=Freeman|author-first1=Jane|year=1987|editor-last=Crowley|editor-first=D.A.|title=Victoria County History: Wiltshire: Vol 13 pp79-88 – Parishes: Tollard Royal|url=https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/wilts/vol13/pp79-88|access-date=5 August 2020|website=British History Online|publisher=University of London|author-first2=Janet H|author-last2=Stevenson}}

The 'Royal' suffix came into use in the 16th century, possibly because King John was overlord of part of the manor. The parish population peaked in the later 19th century, with 384 recorded at the 1871 census. Numbers fell to 280 by 1881, then declined for most of the 20th century, reaching a low of 92 at the 1981 census.

= Landowners =

Landowners included Sir Edward Bayntun (d. 1544), Sir James Stumpe (d. 1563) and Sir Matthew Arundell (d. 1598), whose son Thomas was created Baron Arundell of Wardour in 1605. The Tollard estate continued in the Arundell family until circa 1819, when the 10th Baron sold most of the Wiltshire land to George Pitt, 2nd Baron Rivers (d. 1828). It passed to his nephew, the notorious gambler Horace Beckford, who then took the surname Pitt-Rivers. On the death in 1880 of his son, also Horace, the {{convert|27000|acre||abbr=|adj=on}} estate was inherited by a cousin, Augustus Lane-Fox, who also adopted the Pitt Rivers name.{{cite book|author=Mark Bowden|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BaBOAAAAIAAJ|title=Pitt Rivers: The Life and Archaeological Work of Lieutenant-General Augustus Henry Lane Fox Pitt Rivers|date=August 1991|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-40077-0}}

Augustus Pitt Rivers had a long military career, retiring in 1882 with the rank of Lt General. By then he was already known as an ethnologist and antiquarian, and among the first scientific archaeologists; from the mid-1880s he investigated sites around the estate, including those at Rotherley Down, South Lodge and Woodcutts. His ethnological collections form the basis of Oxford's Pitt Rivers Museum, and The Salisbury Museum has a collection of his archaeological material.

The estate descended in the Pitt-Rivers family until the death in 1999 of Michael Pitt-Rivers, then passed to his partner William Gronow-Davis (d. 2015).

Religious sites

= Parish church =

The earliest known record of the Church of England parish church of St. Peter ad Vincula dates from 1291. Early English style features that survive from this time include the tower arch, a doorway and several windows, including two in the nave. The bell tower was built after a gift of £10 for the purpose in 1412.

The earliest record of the church's dedication to St. Peter ad Vincula ("St Peter in Chains") dates from 1469. It is one of only 15 churches in England with this dedication, which is after the Basilica of San Pietro in Vincoli in Rome.

Late in the 15th and early in the 16th centuries extensive Perpendicular Gothic alterations were made to the church. The tower was rebuilt and the south porch and three-bay north aisle were added and the nave was increased in height.

A west gallery was added in 1714 and later removed, probably during rebuilding work in the 1850s. The works included rebuilding the north aisle, removing the chancel arch and blocking up the east window, causing Pevsner to describe the church as "much renewed".{{cite book|last1=Pevsner|first1=Nikolaus|title=Wiltshire|last2=Cherry|first2=Bridget (revision)|publisher=Penguin Books|year=1975|isbn=0-14-0710-26-4|edition=2nd|series=The Buildings of England|place=Harmondsworth|pages=525–527|author-link1=Nikolaus Pevsner|orig-year=1963}} In 1966 the church was designated as Grade II* listed.{{National Heritage List for England|num=1146278|desc=Church of St Peter ad Vincula, Tollard Royal|access-date=3 June 2015}} Today the parish is part of the Chase Benefice, a group of nine on both sides of the Dorset/Wiltshire border.{{Cite web|title=Villages|url=http://www.chasebeneficedorset.org.uk/index.php/villages|access-date=2020-08-15|website=Chase Benefice}}

In 1553 the church had three bells and a sanctus bell. One was recast by William Tosier of Salisbury{{cite web |url=http://dove.cccbr.org.uk/founders.php |title=Bell Founders |work=Dove's Guide for Church Bell Ringers |access-date=10 June 2010}} in 1728 and another by Mears and Stainbank in 1882, but the third mediaeval bell still hung in the tower in 1927. Two more bells were cast by Mears and Stainbank and added to the tower in 1889. In 1999 the three Mears and Stainbank bells and the mediaeval bell were replaced with a ring of six bells cast by the Whitechapel Bell Foundry.{{cite web |url=http://dove.cccbr.org.uk/detail.php?searchString=Tollard+Royal&DoveID=TOLLARD+RO |title=Tollard Royal S Peter ad Vincula |work=Dove's Guide for Church Bell Ringers |access-date=10 June 2010}} The 1728 bell has not been recast but it is no longer rung. The sanctus bell has also been retained; it was cast in Salisbury in about 1400.

= Methodists =

The parish had a Methodist congregation by 1773, and for several decades the Methodists worshipped in private homes licensed for the purpose. In 1879 a Primitive Methodist chapel was built of brick; it was closed in 1957.

King John's House

The large house known as King John's House, just south of the church, which is a former manor house and later a farmhouse,{{cite web|website=Wiltshire Community History|title=Tollard Royal|url=https://apps.wiltshire.gov.uk/communityhistory/Community/Index/227|publisher=Wiltshire Council|access-date=18 August 2020}} has at its core a 13th-century hall house. Remodelling in the 16th and 17th centuries added wings, in part timber-framed. Augustus Pitt Rivers restored and extended the house, and opened it to the public around 1890 as a museum, but by 1907 it was again a residence. Pevsner describes the house as "memorable".

The house was designated as Grade II* listed in 1966,{{National Heritage List for England|num=1146279|desc=King John's House|access-date=17 August 2020|fewer-links=yes}} and is operated by the Rushmore Estate as a holiday let and a base for events such as weddings.{{cite web|title=King John's House|url=http://www.rushmoreuk.com/visiting-rushmore/king-johns-house/|access-date=16 November 2021|website=Rushmore Estate}}

Amenities

Tollard Royal has a public house, the King John Inn.[http://www.kingjohninn.co.uk/ King John Inn]

Sandroyd School, an independent junior school, is near the village at Rushmore House.{{National Heritage List for England|num=1318658|desc=Rushmore House|access-date=4 August 2020|fewer-links=yes}} The nearest state schools are at Ludwell and Shaftesbury, the village's 19th-century National School having closed in 1962.{{cite web|title=National School, Tollard Royal|url=https://apps.wiltshire.gov.uk/communityhistory/School/Details/1472|website=Wiltshire Community History|publisher=Wiltshire Council|access-date=3 June 2015}}

Rotherley Downs, a biological Site of Special Scientific Interest, is partly within the parish.

Larmer Tree Gardens

{{Main|Larmer Tree Gardens}}

Augustus Pitt Rivers, army officer and founder of modern archaeology, created a pleasure garden in 1880 within part of his Rushmore Estate to the south of Tollard Royal;{{National Heritage List for England|num=1000478|desc=Larmer Tree Grounds|access-date=4 August 2020|fewer-links=yes}} the first private garden to be opened for public enjoyment in the United Kingdom. Following restoration in the 1990s, the Grade II* listed gardens are open to the public and are used for weddings and other events. The annual Larmer Tree Festival of music and arts has been held there since 1990, and the End of the Road music festival since 2006.

Ashcombe Estate

{{Main|Ashcombe House, Wiltshire}}

Ashcombe House and its {{convert|1134|acre|ha}} estate lies between Tollard Royal and Berwick St John, in Berwick parish. Photographer and designer Cecil Beaton lived there between 1930 and 1945; it was bought by entertainer Madonna and her then husband Guy Ritchie in 2002, and transferred to Ritchie in 2009 as part of their divorce settlement.

Notable people

William Thorne (d. 1630), Regius Professor of Hebrew at Oxford, was rector from 1601.

Vere Temple (1898–1980), wildlife artist and entomologist, lived at Tollard Royal for some time around 1951.{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1A0TAAAAIAAJ|title=The Entomologist|publisher=J. Van Voorst|year=1951|volume=84-85|page=29}}{{Cite book|last=Temple|first=Vere|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/182856846|title=List of water colours of British plants and trees executed by Vere Temple of Kings Chase, Tollard Royal, Salisbury.|language=en|oclc=182856846}}

References

{{Reflist}}