A
Guide to the Ancient Town of Winchelsea
At first glance it is a pretty, well cared for village
with obvious points of interest including the Church, the Court Hall, and the
medieval gates. In fact, Winchelsea is not a village but a town and one of the
Cinque Ports. Its history is closely woven with that of England itself. This
site is planned to tell you what there is to be seen.
The life of Winchelsea has always been bound up with
the sea and the winds. They have played it strange tricks. The result is that
our shores are alternately eroded and built up in erratic cycles that may last
for many years and cannot be predicted. It was this wavering coast that the
first men of Winchelsea selected for their homes.
Winchelsea was not originally built on the hill top where
it now stands but on a shingle spit running out from the Fairlight cliffs towards
the north and east. Its old site has been engulfed by the sea. It is generally
agreed that it was offshore from the present village of Camber. There is no
certain reference to it until the twelfth century when it appears as a town
of some importance whose help was sought by Hastings in fulfilling their duties
as a Cinque Port. The "Antient Towns" of Winchelsea and Rye then consented to
join the confederation of the Cinque Ports on very favourable terms, complete
equality with the five head ports.
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Content
by Melvyn Pett with the encouragement of the Mayor of Winchelsea Site hosted by BioMedical Computing Ltd |
Photography
by Melvyn Pett © Winchelsea Corporation 2007 |