Monkton Deverill is a village and former civil parish in Wiltshire, England, about five miles south of Warminster and four miles northeast of Mere. It stands on the River Wylye and forms part of a group of villages known as the Upper Deverills.
History
Two Roman roads intersect close to the village. In 1989–1990, archaeologists investigated a 7th-century Anglo-Saxon cemetery in the parish and also made a section through a Roman road. Before the Dissolution of the Monasteries, Monkton Deverill was a manor of Glastonbury Abbey and was formerly known as East Monkton. In the Middle Ages, its church was a chapel of the church at Longbridge Deverill, also a Glastonbury manor. For almost forty years, beginning in the late 14th century, the bailiffs of Glastonbury Abbey's manors of Longbridge and Monkton Deverill, which were remote from the Abbey's own logistical systems, kept good accounts of their stewardship. These records survive and provide detailed information on the manors' agricultural and other business. They show that most of the grain produced on the land went to markets within ten miles, except in years when it was selling for higher prices. Most buyers of the manors' wool came from within a radius of twenty miles. However, some items, such as millstones, were brought from much farther away. After the Dissolution, the manor was sold by the Crown to John Thynne together with Longbridge Deverill and thereafter descended in his family, who much later became Marquesses of Bath. The Thynnes have preserved many of Glastonbury Abbey's records at Longleat up to the present day. The village has two farmhouses dating from the 17th century: Manor Farmhouse and Burton Farmhouse. A small school was built near the church c. 1870, but had closed by 1895. Historic England describe the building as "a good example of a simple village school with Gothic and vernacular detail". The population of the parish was 204 in 1831, but is now lower. A detailed parish history is in progress and will be published as part of volume XIX of A History of the County of Wiltshire.
Parish church
The former Church of England parish church was dedicated to St Alfred the Great. Alfred had marched into the valley of the Deverills in 878, on his way to victory at the Battle of Ethandun. In 1845, most of the church was demolished, leaving only the 14th-century tower standing, and rebuilt under the direction of Thomas Henry Wyatt. The Gentleman's Magazine noted in January 1846: The new church contained a fine pulpit, believed to be originally from Belgium, also presented in the mid 19th century by the Rev. Lord Charles Thynne, rector of the parish. Monkton Deverill was anciently a chapelry of Longbridge Deverill, but was transferred to Kingston Deverill in 1892. In 1928, Edward Hutton noted: The church was confirmed redundant in 1971 and has since been converted into a private house. The 12th-century stone font was transferred to St Peter's at Stourton. The parish registers are now held in the Wiltshire and Swindon History Centre and cover the periods 1695–1961, 1749–1958, and 1740–1980.