Bleadon was listed in the
Domesday Book of 1086 as , meaning 'coloured or variegated hill', from
Old English 'colour' and 'hill, mountain'. The parish was part of the
Winterstoke Hundred. Just to the north of the village is
Bleadon Hill, a 13.52
hectare geological Site of Special Scientific Interest. There is evidence of agricultural use of the land in the
medieval period and probably from at least the
Bronze Age. The village cross and well are listed buildings. Bleadon lies on the
River Axe and had been a small port, sometimes known as Lympsham Wharf, for many years, with the arrival of the railway in 1841 making this the furthest navigable point. It was last used, by the
ketch Democrat, in 1942. An
act of Parliament of 1915 authorised the drainage of the river and installation of a flood gate at Bleadon, although attempts to control the water had occurred on Bleadon Level since medieval times, including an early
windmill, in 1613, to pump water into the sea from behind a sea wall.
Battle of Bleadon Following the
Norman Conquest in 1066, the sons of the King
Harold Godwinson,
Godwin,
Edmund and perhaps
Magnus, took refuge in Ireland, where they enlisted the support of
Diarmait mac Máel na mBó,
King of Leinster. Supplied with men and ships, they returned to the
West Country of England, the homelands of the
House of Godwin, in the summer of 1068. However, the citizens of
Bristol remained loyal to King
William the Conqueror and closed their gates to the rebels. Moving into Somerset, they were opposed by a force led by the English earl
Eadnoth the Staller. The two armies met at Bleadon and although Eadnoth was killed in the action, Harold's sons were defeated and returned to Ireland. ==Governance==