Trotton with Chithurst
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Template:Short descriptionScript error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Trotton with Chithurst is a civil parish in the Chichester district of West Sussex, England. Trotton is on the A272 road Script error: No such module "convert". west of Midhurst. Chithurst is about Script error: No such module "convert". northeast of Trotton. The parish also contains the hamlet of Dumpford.
In the 2001 census the parish covered Script error: No such module "convert". and had 129 households with a total population of 328. 160 residents were economically active.[1] At the 2011 Census the population had only increased marginally to 329.[2]
Trotton
The village of Trotton is an Anglican parish on the A272, which passes over the River Rother near the church. Traffic over the sandstone bridge, which is Grade I listed and dates to about 1600,[3] is controlled by traffic lights because it is too narrow for two vehicles to pass.
Parish church
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". St George's Church dates to around 1230,[4] and was rebuilt in about 1400.[5] The church is used by the British Orthodox Church once a month.
History
Trotton (Traitone or Trattone) was listed in the Domesday Book (1086) in the ancient hundred of Dumpford as having 14 households comprising four villagers and ten smallholders; with ploughing land, woodland, meadows, a mill and a church, it had a value to the lord of the manor of £5.[6]
In 1861, the population of the Anglican parish was 452, and its area was Script error: No such module "convert"..[5]
Notable people
According to Samuel Johnson, the author Thomas Otway was born in Trotton (Johnson calls it "Trottin") in 1652.[7] Otway's father, Humphrey, was curate of the parish.[5]
Chithurst
The village of Chithurst contains St Mary's Church and Cittaviveka, the Chithurst Buddhist Monastery.
The church dates to the 11th century.[8] It is one of the smallest recorded in Taylor & Taylor’s Anglo-Saxon Architecture, and exhibits Saxon features in the proportions, the thinness of the walls, a splayed window in the south chancel wall, long-and-short work quoins with large shaped stones, and some herringbone work in the stone rubble masonry of the walls. It consists of a nave and chancel which show these signs of construction in the Anglo-Saxon era, with a later west porch and bell turret.
Chithurst (Titcherste) was listed in the Domesday Book (1086) in the ancient hundred of Dumpford as having 14 households comprising six villagers, five smallholders and three slaves; with ploughing land, woodland, meadows, a mill and a church, it had a value to the lord of the manor of £3.[9]
In 1861, Chithurst had a population of 213 and an area of Script error: No such module "convert". of which, according to Kelly's 1867 Directory "about 360 are waste and wood land".[10]
Dumpford
Dumpford is a hamlet located on a minor road between Trotton and Elsted railway station, and also the name of an historic Hundred, which encompassed 277 households in the settlements of South Harting, East Harting and West Harting, Elsted, Treyford, Chithurst and Trotton.[11]
Dumpford has an hotel, Southdowns Country Hotel, a sewage works and Terwick watermill.[12]
References
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External links
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