The village has an entry in the
Domesday Book of 1086, where it is referred to as
Alrelie meaning "Woodland clearing where alders grow" (from OE alor + lēah). Records show that the village is located in the
hundred of
Grimboldestou with a total population of sixteen (16) households (7 villagers, 5 smallholders, 4 slaves) whilst also boasting 2 lord's plough teams, 7 men's plough teams, 12 acres of meadows and 1 mill; in 1066 the Lord of the Estate was the
Anglo-Saxon thegn Wigot of Wallingford, whereas in 1086 it was the wealthy
Norman landowner
Miles Crispin. In a later 1309 document the village is referred to as
Alreleye, and in a 1345 document as
Alrely. In the 16th and 17th centuries, the village contained a number of woollen mills, In
A Topographical Dictionary of England by
Samuel Lewis published in 1831, Alderley is described thus: :
ALDERLEY, a parish in the upper division of GRUMBALD'S ASH, county of GLOUCESTER, 2 miles (S.S.E.) from Wotton under Edge, containing 235 inhabitants. The living is a discharged rectory, in the
archdeaconry and
diocese of Gloucester, rated in the king's books at £ 11. 4. 7., and in the patronage of Mr. and Mrs. Hale. The village is situated on a hill between two streams, which unite and fall into the
LOWER AVON.
Cornua ammonis and other fossils are found here.
Sir Matthew Hale,
Lord Chief Justice in the reign of
Charles II., born here 1 November 1609, lies interred in the church. As part of the
local government changes of the early 1970s, Alderley was the only parish of
Sodbury Rural District not to form part of the newly created district of Northavon in the county of Avon, instead joining
Stroud district in
Gloucestershire. == Architecture ==