Information About

Ewelme




Ewelme is a Village and Civil Parish in the South Oxfordshire district of the county of Oxfordshire in England .

The village lies in a little picturesque valley, four miles east of the for 'waters whelming'. To the east of the village is Cow Common and to the west, Benson Airfield , the north-eastern corner of which falls just within the parish boundary. The soil is Chalk and Gravel over galt Clay .

Ewelme is chiefly known for its beautiful 15th Century cloistered Almshouses , officially called 'The Two Chaplains and Thirteen Poor Men of Ewelme in the County of Oxford'. The thirteen almsmen have now been reduced to eight, but the building is still run as a charity by the Ewelme Trust.

The almshouses were established in on a fine Tomb Chest and Alice beneath one of the most magnificent medieval Church Monument s in the country, complete with rotting Cadaver . Her Effigy was examined by Queen Victoria 's commissioners in order to discover how a lady should wear the Order Of The Garter . Married three times, Alice was a powerful and influential lady. Amongst her husbands were the 4th Earl Of Salisbury and the 1st Duke Of Suffolk , Lord Chamberlain of England. Her six-year-old step-great-granddaughter, the 15th Countess Of Warwick , also died at Ewelme (but was buried at Reading Abbey ).


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