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'''Brill''' is a village and [[Civil parishes in England|civil parish]] in [[Aylesbury Vale]] district in [[Buckinghamshire]], England, close to the boundary with [[Oxfordshire]]. It is about {{convert|4|mi|km}} north-west of [[Long Crendon]] and {{convert|7|mi|km}} south-east of [[Bicester]]. It has a [[Royal charter]] to hold a weekly market, but has not done so for many years.
'''Brill''' is a village and [[Civil parishes in England|civil parish]] in [[Aylesbury Vale]] district in [[Buckinghamshire]], England, close to the boundary with [[Oxfordshire]]. It is about {{convert|4|mi|km|0}} north-west of [[Long Crendon]] and {{convert|7|mi|km}} south-east of [[Bicester]]. It has a [[Royal charter]] to hold a weekly market, but has not done so for many years.


==Toponym==
==Toponym==

Revision as of 22:01, 1 April 2013

Brill
Brill windmill
Population1,141 [1]
OS grid referenceSP658139
Civil parish
  • Brill
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townAylesbury
Postcode districtHP18
Dialling code01844
PoliceThames Valley
FireBuckinghamshire
AmbulanceSouth Central
UK Parliament
WebsiteBrill Village Website
List of places
UK
England
Buckinghamshire

Brill is a village and civil parish in Aylesbury Vale district in Buckinghamshire, England, close to the boundary with Oxfordshire. It is about 4 miles (6 km) north-west of Long Crendon and 7 miles (11 km) south-east of Bicester. It has a Royal charter to hold a weekly market, but has not done so for many years.

Toponym

Brill's name is a combination of Brythonic and Anglo Saxon words for 'hill' (Brythonic breg and Anglo Saxon hyll). In the reign of Edward the Confessor it was a town called Bruhella.

Manor

Brill

The manor of Brill was the administration centre for the royal hunting Forest of Bernwood and was for a long time a property of the Crown. King Edward the Confessor had a palace here.[2] There is evidence that Henry II, John, Henry III and Stephen all held court at the palace.[citation needed] It remained in place until the time of Charles I, who turned the building into a Royalist garrison in the English Civil War. This led the Parliamentarian John Hampden to destroy it in 1643.

Church and priory

The Church of England parish church of All Saints was built early in the 12th century, and its nave and chancel remain essentially Norman structures.[3] The chancel's north wall has a blocked lancet window from that period.[4] The pointed chancel arch is 13th century.[4] The Perpendicular Gothic[4] west tower was built early in the 15th century.[3] The present chancel roof dates from the 17th century.[3][4]

The north aisle was built in 1839 but its east window dates from about 1275.[4] In 1888 All Saints' was largely rebuilt under the direction of John Oldrid Scott.[4] Scott extended the chancel eastwards[4] by about 6 feet (1.8 m) and added a new Gothic Revival east window.[3] He added the south aisle and porch at the same time but its east and west windows are re-used Perpendicular Gothic ones, probably dating from early in the 16th century.[3]

All Saints was a chapel of ease to the nearby parish of Oakley from the 12th until the 16th century.[3] It belonged to the Priory of St Frideswide, Oxford until the Dissolution of the Monasteries.

Brill had a hermitage or priory dedicated to St. Werburgh that was annexed to Chetwode Priory from 1251.[3] Chetwode Priory surrendered the advowson of the hermitage to the Bishop of Lincoln in 1460.[3]

Brill windmill

Brill is also known for its windmill, last owned and used by the Pointer and Nixie family who also baked bread in their house in the village.[citation needed] With timbers dating from 1685, Brill Windmill provides one of the earliest and best preserved examples of a post mill (the earliest type of European windmill) in the UK.[citation needed] Management and ownership of the Grade II* listed mill was passed to Buckinghamshire County Council in 1947 who, through a number of major interventions, have ensured that the mill still stands today. In 1967 the Council installed a structural steel framework that helps to support the mill's ancient timber frame but means that the mill is static and can no longer turn to face the wind.

Restoration project

By the 2000s water ingress and weathering had caused timber decay to the extent that the structure's integrity was described as "At risk". The Brill Windmill Management Group was established in 2007 to help plan a restoration project and to seek the necessary funds. With funding from English Heritage and WREN, full repair and preservation work was completed by July 2009. The mill is now structurally sound and once again open to the public, once a week, between March and September.

Brill tramway

Former site of the Brill Tramway terminus

Brill railway station was once a north-western terminus of the London Underground system.[5]

After the completion in 1868 of the Aylesbury and Buckingham Railway, the Duke of Buckingham built the light railway to provide freight access by rail to his estates at Wotton Underwood. The extension to Brill gave access to a brickworks there. The line was opened in 1871, and following public demand passenger facilities were provided early in 1872. Originally known as the Brill Tramway, the line’s name changed to "Oxford and Aylesbury Tramroad" when a company was formed in an abortive attempt to extend the line to Oxford; the biggest hindering expense was the cost of tunnelling under Brill Hill.

The original Quainton Road station was north of the Quainton-Waddesdon road, and wagons from the Brill line reached it by means of a wagon turntable; there was no direct access.[6] When the Metropolitan Railway took over the line in 1896, it doubled the main line from Aylesbury and re-sited the station to its present position, replacing a level crossing with the present road over bridge; a running connection between the Brill line and the main line was constructed at that time. In 1935, on the creation of the LPTB, control was transferred to it from the Metropolitan and Great Central Joint Committee which had taken it over in 1906; the whole branch was closed on 30 November 1935.

Little London

The hamlet of Little London to the south was part of Brill parish until 1934, when Buckinghamshire County Council moved the parish boundary and transferred the hamlet to Oakley. When the Metropolitan railway built Brill station, it has been said[by whom?] that in honour of the metropolitan ambience the planners were trying to evoke, another Little London was founded to the north of the village.[citation needed]

Amenities

Brill Church of England Combined School is a mixed, voluntary controlled, Church of England primary school. It takes children from the age of four through to the age of eleven. The school has about 175 pupils.

Notable people

James Govier (1910–74) the British painter, etcher and engraver produced images of Brill church and windmill, along with images of Buckinghamshire. Govier's family originated from Brill and the adjoining parish of Oakley, and he was born in Oakley. Examples of Govier's work can be seen at the County Museum in Aylesbury and at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford.

The perpetrators of the Great Train Robbery in 1963 hid at the remote Leatherslade Farm on the boundary with the village of Oakley.

Mick Pointer, drummer and founding member of the progressive rock bands Marillion and Arena was born on 22 July 1956 in Brill.

References in literature

Brill is featured in the novel The Book of Dave by Will Self. Set 2,000 years in the future, Brill (spelled 'Bril' in the novel) is the location of a manor of Plateist Queers.

It is also often said[citation needed] that J. R. R. Tolkien based the village of Bree in The Lord of the Rings on Brill.[7] He used other nearby places in Oxfordshire as part of the Shire, sometimes using the same names, such as Buckland.

References

  1. ^ "2011 census". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  2. ^ See Osbert of Clare's life of St. Edward, chapter 16 (Analecta Bollandiana 41 (1923), 96).
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Page, 1927, pages 14–19
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Pevsner, 1973, page 72
  5. ^ Oppitz, 2000, page not cited
  6. ^ Mitchell and Smith, 2006, page not cited
  7. ^ Shippey, 2002, page not cited

Sources and further reading