VCH Explore

Explore England's Past

Villages

The village of Aylesford in the Medway Valley, Kent

The complexity in distinguishing between parishes, both ecclesiastical and civil, vills and townships, means that the term village may be an easier one to deal with as a description of a settlement which included houses and communities of people.

However, the term is sometimes used in a more specialist fashion. Estate villages are 18th and 19th century creations by landowners who rebuilt, sometimes involving moving, villages where they owned all the property in vernacular styles. Good examples are Milton Abbas, Dorset, and Edensor on the Dukes of Devonshire’s Chatsworth estate in Derbyshire, where a variety of pattern book designs ensured that every house had an individual character. Open and close or closed villages were terms invented in the 19th century by the Poor Law Commissioners to denote villages where the land was owned either by a single person or a small group (close), or where the land was fragmented between a number of different owners. Close villages were characterised by neat appearances, public houses (when allowed) named after the squire, and conventionally Church of England, while open villages were more populous, had greater numbers of the poor, nonconformist chapels, and a greater element of social laxity.

Theme Items

Mousehole place names

Tolcarne is one of the smaller settlements that made up 18th century Newlyn.

This was one of the smaller settlements that made up Newlyn.

At the opening of the 18th century, Southwick appeared little altered from the middle ages.

A significant village on the outer fringes of Bishopwearmouth parish, the coastal settlement of Ryhope found a new lease of life when a pit village

The image here shows the busy riverside settlement of South Hylton.

Tunstall, between Ryhope and Silksworth, remained an agricultural hamlet into the 19th century.

There had been little change in the layout of medieval Monkwearmouth when this map was published in 1737.

Although much of the earlier road pattern has been swept away, it is still possible to make out the shape of medieval villages at Southwick and Bis

Until 1719, the area that was to become Sunderland was divided into two parishes which served administrative as well as religious purposes.

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