Clifton Campville is a village, former
manor and
civil parish[3] in
Staffordshire, England.[4] It lies on the
River Mease, about 10 miles (16 km) east of the
City of Lichfield, 6 miles (10 km) west of
Measham and 7 miles (11 km) north of
Tamworth. The village lies close to Staffordshire's borders with
Derbyshire,
Leicestershire and
Warwickshire. The parish, which includes
Haunton village, had a population of 912 at the 2011 census.[1] There is a fine gothic church, dedicated to St Andrew, and listed
Grade I. The village pub, The Green Man, is also a historic building.
Etymology
The first part of the name is
Old Englishclif tun, that is cliff farm; the family de Camvill held the land in the early 13th century.[5] The name has also been recorded as Clistone.[6]
Descent of the manor
There is some evidence of pre-
Saxon, or even
pre-historic settlement in the area. After the
Norman Conquest of 1066 the manor was in the royal
demesne. The manor of Clistone is listed in the
Domesday Book of 1086 as having 33 villagers, a priest, 11 ploughs and 2 mills. One of the mills was possibly at Mill Farm.[6]
de Camville
From 1200 it was
held by the de Camville (or de Canville) family, at least until 1338, which originated probably at the Normandy manor of Canville-la-Rocque, in La Manche (not at Canville-les-Deux-Églises in the Pays de Caux).[7] The arms of the de Camville family were: Azure, three lions passant argent.[7] The descent in the de Camville family was as follows:
William de Camville I, who married Auberée Marmion (fl.1233), daughter and heiress of Geoffrey Marmion of Clifton and of Arrow, Warwickshire. (Dugdale and others erroneously state William and Auberée to have been the parents of the 1st Baron, rather than the great-grandparents, as noted in The Complete Peerage).
Geoffrey de Camville I (d.1219) of Clifton, who married twice: firstly to Felice de Worcester, a daughter of Philip de Worcester, from whom he was divorced due to
consanguinity, having had a son Richard de Camville; Secondly he married Leuca de Braiose (d.1236), a grand-daughter of William de Braiose, of the
marcher lords family.
William de Camville II (d.1260), 2nd son and heir (by his father's second wife Leuca de Braiose), of Clifton and of
Llansteffan in Carmarthen, Wales and of Fedamore, County Limerick and Caher, County Tipperary, both in Ireland. He was awarded possession of the manor of Clifton following a legal dispute with his elder half-brother Richard de Camville.[8] He married a certain Lucy (d.post-1284);[9]
Geoffrey de Camville II, 1st Baron Camville (d.1308), son and heir, of Clifton, who having been summoned to Parliament on 24 June 1295 and subsequently, by writs directed to Galfrido de Caunvilla, Caumvilla, Canvilla or Camvilla, was deemed thereby to have been created
Baron Camville (or Baron Canville).[10] He was knighted after 1272. In 1282 he was serving in the army of West Wales and was summoned for
military service from 1276 to 1308, and to attend the king from 1294 to 1297.[11] He married twice, firstly to Maud de Brian (1242 – d.pre-1279), widow of Nicholas Martin (son and
heir apparent of Nicholas FitzMartin of Kemes/Cemais in Pembrokeshire and
feudal baron of
Blagdon[12] in Somerset), a daughter of Guy de Brian of
Laugharne, Carmarthenshire, Wales, by his wife Eve de Tracy, daughter and heiress of Henry de Tracy,
feudal baron of Barnstaple in Devon. On 24 September 1274 Geoffrey de Camville II gave homage to the king and received livery of the lands of Henry de Tracy, his first wife's maternal grandfather. Secondly he married a certain Joan.[9]
William de Camville III, 2nd Baron Camville (1268–1338), of Clifton, son and heir, who died without male issue leaving five daughters and co-heiresses, between the descendants of whom the barony is deemed to be in
abeyance:[9]
Richard Stafford, eldest son and
heir apparent, who predeceased his father.
Edmund Stafford (1344–1419),
Bishop of Exeter from 1395 to his death in 1419, heir to his father. Pre-Reformation bishops being unmarried, on his death without issue the manor appears to have reverted to the Vernon family.
Other
By 1700 it was in possession of the Coventry family, who sold it in that year to
Sir Charles Pye, Baronet, whose descendant Henry John Pye owned the manor in 1851.[15][16]
Governance
In 1848 the parish included both
Haunton and
Harlaston, and also
Chilcote in Derbyshire. Clifton itself then had a population of 341, while the population of the whole parish was 921 on 6,300 acres (25 km2).[16] The core parish of Clifton and Haunton covered around 3,000 acres (12 km2) in 1851.[15] It became part of Tamworth Poor Law Union in
1836; in 1866 Harlaston became a
civil parish in its own right. In
1894 Clifton with Haunton became a civil parish within the newly constituted
Tamworth Rural District.[17][18]
Electorally the parish is part of the Mease and Tame ward of Lichfield District,[20] and lies within the parliamentary constituency of
Tamworth.[2]
Landmarks
Clifton contains a number of listed buildings, including the
Grade I listed Church of St Andrew, Clifton Hall, Manor Farm, the old Post Office and the village pub, the Green Man. There are also several historic buildings in
Haunton.[21]
The parish church, dedicated to St Andrew, is a
Grade I listed building.[21] Though nothing remains of the building mentioned in
Domesday, some parts of the south wall date back to the year 1200, with traces of 13th century wall paintings. The church was enlarged into the shape of a cross in the first half of the 13th century. It was enlarged again in the 14th century. The tower was built in the first half of the 14th century, with a spire, reaching to a height of about 210 feet (65 m), added at some time during the century. The interior includes 14th century screens carved from oak; the
rood screen is from the 15th century, as is some stained glass in one of the north windows. The church was
restored by
George Edmund Street in the second half of the 19th century, and again by
W. D. Caroe in the early 20th century. In 1984 the spire was struck by lightning, with much damage to the church. Repairs were completed in 1987.[6][22]
The adjoining cemetery also dates back to mediaeval days.[6]
The Church of England parish includes Haunton and Chilcote, and also
Statfold.[23]
The Old Rectory is in origin a 15th-century building, though the history of the rectory can be traced further back, to the mid 14th century. The building was altered in 1694, and again in 1778, and restored in around 1980. It is listed Grade II.[6][21]
Education
The village school is St Andrew's Church of England
ControlledPrimary School. In 2009 it had 63 pupils, and was rated as 'outstanding' by
OFSTED.[24][25]
^Sanders, I.J. English Baronies: A Study of their Origin and Descent 1086–1327, Oxford, 1960, p.15
^
ab"Baron Stafford of Clifton" not mentioned in The Complete Peerage. George Oliver, Lives of the Bishops of Exeter, 1861, re Edmund Stafford (1344–1419), Bishop of Exeter: "His parents, as is evident from the ordinatio or foundation-deed of his chantry, dated 1st October, 1408, were Sir Richard de Stafford, knight (who was summoned to parliament among the barons of the realm from 44th Edward III. to 3rd Richard II.), and Isabella, daughter of Sir Richard Vernon of Haddon, knight, by Hand (sic, Maud?) his wife, eldest daughter and co-heir of William Lord Camville."
^"Chilcote". Online Gazetteer. Staffordshire County Council. 21 April 2009. Archived from
the original on 7 March 2012. Retrieved 30 October 2009.
^
ab"Clifton Campville". Online Gazetteer. Staffordshire County Council. 21 April 2009. Archived from
the original on 7 March 2012. Retrieved 30 September 2009.