There are three villages in the civil parish of Cuckmere Valley:
Litlington,
Lullington and Westdean. Archaeological remains nearer the coast at Exceat suggest a further settlement there in former times. The civil parish of Cuckmere Valley was created in 1990 when Litlington, Lullington and Westdean parishes were abolished, with small areas transferred between Litlington and
Alfriston, which remained a separate civil parish.
Litlington The name is
Saxon, and probably indicates Litl's homestead. The twelfth- century church is dedicated to
St Michael the Archangel.
Maria Fitzherbert (1756–1837), mistress of
George IV, lived at Clapham House in the village. In 1924 a
chalk figure of a horse was cut into the downs to the west of the village, replacing one cut in the 19th century. The village inn is the Plough and Harrow.
Lullington Lullington is the most northerly of the villages in Cuckmere Valley, about southeast of
Lewes. It lies on a shoulder of the
South Downs at the point where the
River Cuckmere cuts through the downs, on the opposite bank of the river to
Alfriston. A medieval village, Lullington Court, was abandoned after the
Black Death in the 14th century; its site was to the east of the present Lullington. The
church, dedicated to the Good Shepherd, is believed to be the smallest in England, having been rebuilt using only the original chancel after a fire had destroyed the remainder of the building. Services are held only in the summer months, as the building has no electricity.
Westdean Westdean (or West Dean) is a village located on the edge of
Friston Forest. Its church is dedicated to All Saints and has Saxon origins (a Saxon era window is in the north wall). Next door to the church is "The Old Parsonage", a medieval flint and stone home. It was built by Benedictine monks in 1280 and continuously occupied since that period although the clergy vacated in the 1970s and it is now a private home. Opposite the church is the remains of the Norman era manor, although a Norman era dovecote is well maintained. The
South Downs Way walking trail passes through West Dean.
Exceat Exceat ( ) was an ancient village. The
A259 goes by it just east of the River Cuckmere. The name may have come from
æc-sceat, an oak grove, or from the
Old English for "the place of the Aese", early kings of
Kent whilst another etymology is possible from Brittonic
wysg meaning water or river (or possibly "
esgair meaning ridge) and
ceat meaning woods, hence "Wooded River" or "Wooded Ridge". After the
Norman conquest, the village was given to
Robert, Count of Mortain, half brother of
William the Conqueror. Both Exceat and the land were given later to
Grestein Priory in
Wilmington. Until the 14th century, Exceat was an important village with its own church. The village suffered French raids; it suffered many fatalities during the
Black Death, as was effectively
abandoned by the 15th century. The main features are the Visitors Centre for the nearby
Seven Sisters and the Cuckmere Inn
pub across Exceat Bridge over the Cuckmere. ==Landmarks==