The Enchanting Itchen Valley
Today was Bank Holiday Monday and the weather forecast was for sunshine, so we thought carefully about where to go to avoid crowds and traffic. We decided to take our folding e-bikes in the car to Alresford (10 miles away) and to follow a 22-mile route in a book of cycle rides, entitled "The Enchanting Itchen Valley". It proved a good choice, as it took us on lanes and quieter roads. The main photo shows the view soon after leaving Alresford heading towards Cheriton. At this spot there is a memorial to the Battle of Cheriton which took place here in 1644 and was an important Parliamentarian victory. At Cheriton, the source of the Itchen, we stopped for coffee at the Flowerpots pub. Then we cycled onto Tichborne where we visited the little church dedicated to St Andrew,which dates from the 11th century. It is unusual in containing a Roman Catholic chapel, within a Pre- Reformation Anglican Parish Church. The Tichborne family was granted a concession by James I, in 1621, in appreciation of their loyalty to the king. Later, the church was badly damaged in 1678 under the direction of Titus Oates who fabricated the "Popish Plot", a supposed Catholic conspiracy to kill Charles II, but it did survive, and was repaired.
Next we cycled on to Ovington for a brief lunch stop at the Bush Pub, on the river.Our journey back to Alresford then took us via Itchen Abbas and Northington, without any more pub stops, but we did visit another very interesting church. See extras. It is dedicated to St John the Evangelist and rises above the small villages of Northington and Swarraton, and, is known as the cathedral of the valley. It was commissioned by the 4th Lord Ashburton (member of the Baring family )and his wife Leonora to replace an earlier church, and no expense was spared! The architect was Sir Thomas Graham Jackson,a pupil of Sir Gilbert Scott, and the church was built between 1888 and 1890. It represents an important example of late Victorian ecclesiastical art. The stone pulpit is ascended via a spiral staircase and a doorway in the wall (Lord Ashburton's "hole in the wall").The pews all have carved bench-ends, each one with a different design. I particularly liked this Green Man or wodewose. The final extra shows the exterior of the church. Originally it was going to have a modest shingle spire until Lady Ashburton saw the tower of St Johns at Glastonbury and, mid- build, insisted she wanted a tower too!
Another great day out.
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