![]() | Dilwyn's History: Present day Dilwyn is the result of more than a 1,000 years of settlement. This section describes the known history from before Domesday to more recent times. | |
| General History |
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Around two hundred years after the legions were withdrawn the Saxons reached the River Lugg at Leominster, and eventually, over time, spread Westwards over the fertile land as far as the present border with Wales, resulting in a mixed Saxon and Celtic population but with the Saxons as overlords. Under the Saxons, the area became part of the Saxon kingdom of Mercia. The next event was the Norman Conquest and four Dilwyn settlements appeared in the Domesday Book. In two entries it is spelt DILUEN. In the others it appears as DILGE! Five other settlements in the modern parish are also listed under names that they still have today, several dignified by the suffix 'Court'. Under the Normans, the first church was built. Its roof line can still be seen on the wall of the tower. The present Church, dedicated to St Mary, dates from the end of the 13th Century. One of the battles of the War of the Roses was fought at Mortimers
Cross, just to the north of Dilwyn, in 1461 with the Yorkists winning
under the leadership of Edward, Earl of March. Later that year he was crowned King of England (as Edward IV).
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