Berners Roding

Berners Roding
Berners Roding
Berners Roding shown within Essex
OS grid reference TL6009
Civil parish
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town Ongar
Postcode district CM5
Police Essex
Fire Essex
Ambulance East of England
EU Parliament East of England

Berners Roding (pronounced Barnish) [1] is a village in the civil parish of Abbess, Beauchamp and Berners Roding and the Epping Forest District of Essex, England. The village is included in the eight hamlets and villages called The Rodings. Berners Roding is 6 miles (10 km) west from the county town of Chelmsford.

History

According to A Dictionary of British Place Names, Roding derives from "Rodinges" as is listed in the Domesday Book and recorded earlier as such at c.1050.[2] 'Berners' Roding is not listed in Domesday.

The village, and previous parish, was traditionally known as Berners Roothing, and in the Hundred of Dunmow. The parish church was appropriated to the monastery of St Leonard, at Bow in Middlesex. The daughter of Sir James Berners, Juliana Berners of the Order of Saint Benedict, writer on heraldry, hawking and hunting, and prioress of the Priory of St Mary of Sopwell, was born in the parish.[3][4]

In the 19th century Berners Roding was in the Dunmow Unionpoor relief provision set up under the Poor Law Amendment Act 1834 and part of the Rural Deanery of Roding. The registers of the church of All Saints' (deconsecrated in 1985 and privately owned) date to 1538. The 1848 living was a perpetual curracy, held by the rector of Margaret Roothing, and in the gift or donative of the Lord of the Manor. In 1882 the living was in the gift of a Colonel Bramston, and held by the rector of Willingale Doe, part of today's Willingale, where the children of Berners Roding attended school. In 1848 Berners Roothing parish land of 1,030 acres (4.2 km2) supported a population of 103; in 1882, 1,050 acres (4.2 km2) supported 86. Crops grown at the time were chiefly wheat, barley and beans, on a heavy soil with a clay subsoil. Parish occupations included three farmers in 1848, and two in 1882.[3][4]

Since 1946, Berners Roding has been part of the Abbess, Beauchamp and Berners Roding civil parish.[5]

References

  1. Hadfield, J. (1970). The Shell Guide to England. London: Michael Joseph.
  2. Mills, Anthony David (2003); A Dictionary of British Place Names, Oxford University Press, revised edition (2011), p.392. ISBN 019960908X
  3. 1 2 White's Directory of Essex 1848
  4. 1 2 Kelly's Directory of Essex 1882 pp.245-247
  5. "Abbess, Beauchamp and Berners Roding", Abbess, Beauchamp and Berners Roding Parish Council. Retrieved 10 February 2018
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