Chipping Norton: Archaeology, History and Buildings

Overview

Chipping Norton is a classic medieval ‘new town’, laid out in the mid 12th century close to a pre-existing rural settlement with a church and Norman castle. In the middle ages it thrived on the back of the international wool trade, and it remained a significant local market centre, widely known from the late 19th century as the home of Bliss’s tweed mill, whose iconic dome and chimney still dominate the local landscape.

Recent years have seen much new interest in the town’s history, buildings and topography, both by professional historians and archaeologists, as well as voluntary organisations and local people. This event reports on some of the new discoveries to have emerged from this work, focusing in particular on: 

  • the archaeology of Chipping Norton, including the recent identification of a major and nationally important Roman settlement, and new work on the Norman castle site;
  • the town’s medieval origins and early development;
  • the town’s standing buildings and their recent investigation by the Chipping Norton Buildings Record in partnership with Historic England; and
  • the town’s social, economic and religious history from the middle ages to the twentieth century, encompassing medieval church and society, 17th-century conflicts around the acquisition of a town charter, and the impact of 19th-century industrialisation. 

This day school marks the publication of a major new study of the town by the Victoria County History (VCH) of Oxfordshire. Several of the speakers have been directly involved in this study, and the day is organised in association with the VCH. 

Please note: this event will close to enrolments at 23:59 GMT (UTC) on 13 November 2024.

Programme details

9.45am   
Registration (Rewley House reception)

10am    
Introduction 
Roger Thomas 

10.15am     
Geographical setting and archaeology 
Richard Oram 

11am    
Tea/coffee break

11.30am     
The medieval town
Stephen Mileson 

12.15pm    
Secular buildings to 1750 
Paul Clark 

1pm     
Lunch break

2.15pm     
Medieval church, religion and guild 
Mark Page 

3pm    
‘Liberties, franchises and immunities’: urban government and the 1607 town charter 
Simon Townley 

3.45pm    
Tea/coffee break

4.15pm    
The industrialised town: Chipping Norton from 1800 
Simon Draper 

5pm    
Discussion and closing remarks 
Simon Townley 

5.15pm     
End of day

Fees

Description Costs
Course Fee (includes tea/coffee) £120.00
Baguette Lunch £7.30
Hot Lunch £19.25

Funding

If you are in receipt of a UK state benefit or are a full-time student in the UK you may be eligible for a reduction of 50% of tuition fees.

Concessionary fees for short courses

Tutors

Mr Roger Thomas

Course Director

Roger Thomas is an archaeologist who spent most of his career working for English Heritage (now Historic England). He is now an Honorary Research Associate in the School of Archaeology, University of Oxford. He is also a barrister. He teaches regularly for the Department for Continuing Education.

Mr Richard Oram

Speaker

Planning Archaeologist, Oxfordshire County Council

Dr Stephen Mileson

Speaker

Stephen Mileson is an Assistant Editor of the Victoria County History of Oxfordshire and editor of the journal Oxoniensia. He was formerly a lecturer in medieval history at St Edmund Hall, Oxford. He has taught for OUDCE for several years and has published widely on medieval social and landscape history.

Mr Paul Clark

Speaker

Paul Clark is a retired mechanical engineer and past student of architectural history at OUDCE. He is currently chairman of Oxfordshire Buildings Record, a voluntary organisation among whose objectives are the advancement of education and promotion of research on the buildings of Oxfordshire. Over recent years he has been helping the Chipping Norton Buildings Record with their research on the town’s buildings and assisting the VCH with their research on the vernacular buildings of Hook Norton. 

Dr Mark R Page

Speaker

Mark Page is an assistant editor at the Victoria County History of Oxfordshire and since 2005 has written around thirty parish histories. He was awarded a DPhil at Oxford in 1996 (on 13th-century Cornwall) and has worked on medieval history research projects in Winchester (using the Winchester pipe rolls) and at the University of Leicester, where he co-wrote the book Medieval Villages in an English Landscape (2006). He is currently researching the history of Kingham parish for the Oxfordshire VCH.

Dr Simon Townley

Speaker

Simon Townley has worked for VCH Oxfordshire since 1987 and has been county editor since 1996. During that time he has researched and written histories of nearly 30 Oxfordshire towns and villages, including contributions to the forthcoming VCH volume on Chipping Norton. He is involved with several Oxfordshire local history societies, and is a former editor of Oxoniensia.

Dr Simon Draper

Speaker

Simon Draper is Assistant Editor for the Oxfordshire Victoria County History (VCH) and County Editor for the VCH in Gloucestershire, where he lives. With a background in archaeology, he is particularly interested in Anglo-Saxon and medieval landscapes. His principal contributions to the Chipping Norton VCH book were chapters on the town’s manorial, economic and social history.

Application

Please use the 'Book' button on this page. Alternatively, please contact us to obtain an application form.

Accommodation

Accommodation is not included in the price, but if you wish to stay with us the night before the course, then please contact our Residential Centre.

Accommodation in Rewley House - all bedrooms are modern, comfortably furnished and each room has tea and coffee making facilities, Freeview television, and Free WiFi and private bath or shower rooms. Please contact our Residential Centre on +44 (0) 1865 270362 or email res-ctr@conted.ox.ac.uk for details of availability and discounted prices. For more information, please see our website: https://www.conted.ox.ac.uk/about/accommodation