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Wherwell

Village and parish in Hampshire, England
Human settlement in England
Wherwell
Location within Hampshire
Population473 (2011 Census including Cottonworth , Fullerton , South Harewood and Upper Enham)[1]
OS grid reference SU3891840929
Civil parish
  • Wherwell
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town ANDOVER
Postcode district SP11
Dialling code 01794
Police Hampshire and Isle of Wight
Fire Hampshire and Isle of Wight
Ambulance South Central
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Hampshire
51°09′58′′N 1°26′42′′W / 51.166°N 1.445°W / 51.166; -1.445

Wherwell is a village on the River Test in Hampshire, England.[2] The name may derive from its bubbling springs resulting in the Middle Ages place name "Hwerwyl" noted in AD 955, possibly meaning "kettle springs" or "cauldron springs." Pronunciation of the name has ranged from "Hurrell" to "Wer-rel" to present-day "Wher-well."[3]

Before the Dissolution, the parish of Wherwell was in the hands of an important abbey of Benedictine nuns, whose abbess was Lady of the Manor of an area much larger than the existing parish.

The C19 church of St. Peter and Holy Cross, at Wherwell, Hampshire, England. September 2024.
The C19 church of St. Peter and Holy Cross, at Wherwell, Hampshire, England. September 2024.

The village is associated with the Cockatrice. The story is that the cockatrice terrorised the village until it was imprisoned in the dungeons below Wherwell Priory. A prize of land was offered to anyone who could kill the creature. None were successful, until a man named Green lowered a mirror into the dungeon. The cockatrice battled against its own reflection until exhausted, at which point Green was able to kill it. Today there is an area of land near Wherwell called Green's Acres. For many years a weather vane in the shape of a cockatrice adorned the C19 church of St. Peter and Holy Cross in Wherwell until it was removed to Andover Museum.

The River Test (which has more than one channel nearby, and a wide flood plain) flows through the village in parallel with the High Street. Several cottages in the village are thatched, some dating from C16.

The village had an inn called "The White Lion Inn" which is currently closed for refurbishment at September 2024.

Education

The village is home to a primary school, Wherwell Primary School.

References

[edit ]
  1. ^ "Civil Parish population 2011". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 13 December 2016.
  2. ^ Richard Rowles, 2011, ‘’The Wherwell Village Website’’, http://www.wherwell.net/, © 2007.
  3. ^ Test Valley Borough Council, 2011, "Wherwell", http://www.testvalley.gov.uk/default.aspx?page=356, Page Last Updated: 10/08/2005.
[edit ]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wherwell .
Towns, villages and hamlets in the Test Valley District of Hampshire, England


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