Ancient and medieval The land around Amesbury has been settled since
prehistoric times, evidenced by the monument of
Stonehenge. In 2014, archaeologists from the
University of Buckingham found Amesbury had been continually occupied since 8,820BC, causing
The Guardian to write that Amesbury was "in effect where British history began". Other finds in the parish point to large-scale prehistoric structures and settlements in the area, including
Bluestonehenge at West Amesbury, the numerous other
monuments around Stonehenge, and the discovery of a
Neolithic village in the neighbouring parish of
Durrington by the
Stonehenge Riverside Project. Excavations in 2002 and 2003 at
Boscombe Down by
Wessex Archaeology found the
Amesbury Archer and
Boscombe Bowmen. It is likely that there was a large Romano-British settlement overlooking the River Avon at this point. It is possible that an order of monks established a
monastery in the area, that was destroyed by the Saxons before they settled the area in the 7th century.
King Alfred the Great left Amesbury in his will, a copy of which is in the
British Library, to his youngest son
Aethelweard (–922). In 1086,
Domesday Book recorded a settlement named
Amblesberie or
Ambresberie with 111 households and eight mills. The largest estate was held by
Wilton Abbey, and other land was held by
Edward of Salisbury. In 979 AD, a Benedictine abbey, the
Abbey of St Mary and St Melor, was founded on what may have been the site of a previous monastery, by Dowager Queen
Ælfthryth. In 1177 the abbey was dissolved by
Henry II Henry III visited the priory several times, and his widow
Eleanor of Provence retired there in 1286, leading to visits by her son,
Edward I; his daughter
Mary of Woodstock and niece
Eleanor of Brittany had already entered the convent when young. The priory continued until the
dissolution of the monasteries in 1540, after which its buildings – including the church with its lead-covered spire – were demolished. The estate remained in the Queensberry family until 1824. It is believed that at some point in the early 19th century,
William Douglas, 4th Duke of Queensberry planted the
Nile Clumps to commemorate
Admiral Nelson, and had the hillfort landscaped as part of the grounds around the mansion. In 1824,
Sir Edmund Antrobus acquired the estate and, finding the mansion in poor repair, had it rebuilt in 1834–1840 to designs of
Thomas Hopper. The house is now operated as a nursing home. In 1677, John Rose, gentleman, founded two schools at Amesbury, a
grammar school for teaching grammar, writing, and ciphering to twenty children born in the parish, and an "English school" to prepare twenty children of poor parents for the grammar school. By a decree in
Chancery of 1831, the freedom of the grammar school was extended to children of "mechanics, artisans, and small tradesmen". The grammar school was closed in 1899, and the children were transferred to a National School.
Recent history With the establishment of the military
Aeroplane and Armament Experimental Establishment at
Boscombe Down in 1939, Amesbury began to expand. As it lies within the A303 commuter belt, Amesbury has seen substantial developments on the land between the old town centre and Boscombe Down. Several new housing estates have been completed, and the most recent one – Archers Gate – has taken its name from the discovery of the
Amesbury Archer. At the Boscombe Down junction of the A303, a mixed business development known as Solstice Park has been built. On 30 June 2018,
two British nationals were poisoned using
Novichok nerve agents before being found unconscious at a property in Amesbury; one of them, Dawn Sturgess, later died. Almost four months earlier, the same nerve agents were used in the
poisoning of Sergei and Yulia Skripal in nearby Salisbury. The Amesbury property was later demolished. ==Population==