The 8th-century
Offa's Dyke runs to the west of the village and marked the frontier of the
Mercian kingdom. Even today, a lengthy section of the dyke to the southwest of the village forms the English border with
Wales. An
Anglo-Saxon fort, built in 915 by
Æthelflæd, Lady of the Mercians, was located just outside the village on what is now the Montgomery Road. The field that the earthworks are in has long been called Castle Field or King's Orchard. Chirbury was once a
hundred, formed out of an earlier, and larger, hundred (of which Chirbury was the chief settlement) called Witentreu (a placename that continues to this day in Whittery Wood, near to the village) which included places now in Wales. Later Chirbury was a
rural district (from 1894 to 1934) — the
Chirbury Rural District. The hundred included a detached township near
Clun, Guilden Down. On 1 April 1987 the parishes of Chirbury and
Brompton and Rhiston merged to form the present-day
civil parish of "Chirbury with Brompton". Historically
Cherbury was the more usual spelling of Chirbury.
Mitchell's Fold and
Hoarstones stone circles lie within the parish.
Church and Priory St Michael's Church, as pictured in the infobox above, is the only church in Chirbury, and is dedicated to
Saint Michael the Archangel. It is
Church of England (
Diocese of Hereford) and the Chirbury
ecclesiastical parish covers a smaller area than the civil parish, including
Wotherton, but not
Brompton,
Marton or
Middleton. Originally an Anglo-Saxon church, founded in 915 (with the building of the fort) or possibly earlier, the current building largely dates to the late 12th century with the tower constructed around 1300, and a short
chancel added in 1733. The church was
restored in 1871–72 by Edward Haycock junior. The tower and body of the church are constructed in
limestone rubble with pink
sandstone ashlar dressings and
slate roofs; the chancel is in red brick with a tiled roof. The church was reformed into the
priory church of the
Augustinian Chirbury Priory upon the moving of the order from nearby
Snead by 1227. St Michael's became a
parish church once again. The church building is a Grade I
Listed building. and some stonework was also incorporated into the adjacent Chirbury Hall.
Conservation area The centre of Chirbury is a
conservation area, which includes Chirbury Hall, St Michael's Church, The Herbert Arms, Chirbury Primary School and the Parish Hall. Most of the village's buildings are either of a red brick or limestone construction, or a combination. ==Amenities==