northwest of the village, at the top of Wears Hill, are the earthworks of
Abbotsbury Castle, an
Iron Age hill fort. The earthworks cover a roughly triangular area of about , of which about are inside the ramparts. In the 10th century a
charter of
King Edmund records a granting of land at
Abbedesburi, a name which indicates the land may have once belonged to an abbot. The couple founded
Abbotsbury Abbey and enriched it with a substantial amount of land. it had 62 households, 16
ploughlands, of meadow and 2 mills. It was in the
hundred of Uggescombe and the lords and
tenants-in-chief were Abbotsbury Abbey and Hawise, wife of Hugh son of Grip. Abbotsbury Abbey existed for 500 years, but was destroyed in the
dissolution, although the abbey barn survived. Stone from the abbey was used in the construction of many buildings in the village, including the house of Abbotsbury's new owner,
Sir Giles Strangways. In 1644, during the
English Civil War,
Roundheads (Parliamentarians) and
Cavaliers (Royalists) clashed at Abbotsbury. Parliamentarians besieged the Royalists in the church of
St. Nicholas; two
bullet holes from the fight remain in the
Jacobean pulpit. In the late 17th, and early 18th centuries Abbotsbury experienced several fires, resulting in the destruction of virtually all its medieval buildings. Most of the historic secular buildings in the village today were built from stone in the 17th and 18th centuries. County historian
John Hutchins (1698–1773) recorded that fishing was the main industry in the village, and 18th-century militia ballot lists reveal that
husbandry was also particularly important. Ropemaking, basketry and the manufacture of cotton
stockings were other notable trades within the village, with records indicating
hemp and
withies being grown in the area. Later,
The Fleet Lagoon was used as a machine gun training range, and
bouncing bombs were tested there, for
Operation Chastise (the "Dambuster" sortie). The modern village still has
a long street of stone houses, The village is surrounded by hills on all sides, except to the east; in 1905
Sir Frederick Treves described Abbotsbury as being "very pleasantly situated among the downs". Dorset-born broadcaster and writer
Ralph Wightman described the village as "possibly the most interesting in Dorset". ==Governance==