Iping
Iping | |
Iping Church |
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Iping shown within West Sussex
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OS grid reference | SU852228 |
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District | Chichester |
Shire county | West Sussex |
Region | South East |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Police | Sussex |
Fire | West Sussex |
Ambulance | South East Coast |
EU Parliament | South East England |
UK Parliament | Chichester |
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Iping is a village in the Chichester district of West Sussex, England. It lies within the civil parish of Stedham with Iping, just off the A272 road 2 miles (3.5 km) west of Midhurst. The village lies on the River Rother. It is the setting of the classic H. G. Wells science fiction book The Invisible Man.
Etymology
The Saxon name means settlement of the family or followers of a man called Ipa.
History
Iron age
There is an Iron Age contour fort on the hill at Hammer Wood north of the village.
Iping Roman station
This rectangular earthwork with rounded corners lies astride the Roman road between two major British tribal centres at Noviomagus Regnorum (Chichester) and Calleva Atrebatum (Silchester), which runs north-south through Iping.[1] Measuring 86 x 112 metres (282 by 367 feet), the area enclosed by the turf defences was about 0.9ha (2¼ acres), and would have contained the official posting station or mansio and perhaps an iron-smithy. It is similar in size to the way stations at Hardham and Alfoldean on Stane Street.[2] The station is situated at National Grid Reference SU:844261, just over two miles to the north of Iping village and little over half a mile from the crossroads in the centre of the village of Milland, just south-east of the point where the Roman road crossed the Hammer Stream. Although unexcavated, surface finds of Roman material have been found within the confines of the earthwork. It could easily be confused with the Hammer Wood Iron Age contour fort which lies much closer to modern Iping.
St Marys Church, Iping is a solid sandstone, Victorian church which was rebuilt in 1885. The church was built on the site of an old Saxon church and it is thought an even earlier church was on the site before this.
Iping Water Mill was producing paper until the 1920s when a fire ended 900 years of various types of milling.
Iping Common sits south of the A272 and is managed by the Sussex Wildlife Trust. This heathland is a Site of Special Scientific Interest.
See also
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Iping. |
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