Henry VIII is said to have given Bardfield to
Anne of Cleves as part of his divorce settlement and a number of buildings in the village are associated with Anne of Cleves, including the
Grade II-listed Great Lodge and its associated Grade I-listed barn, now named after her. The grounds include a Grade I-listed barn and a vineyard. Great Bardfield is home to the Bardfield Cage, a 19th-century village lock-up, and the
Gibraltar Mill, a windmill which has been converted to a house. Great Bardfield played an important role in the history of the
oxlip (
Primula elatior) which, in the UK, is a rare plant only found where
Suffolk,
Essex and
Cambridgeshire meet. Originally it was thought that oxlips were cowslip-primrose hybrids but in 1842
Henry Doubleday and
Charles Darwin conducted tests on plants collected from Great Bardfield and concluded that this was not so. For a while the plant was known as the Bardfield Oxlip. The common cowslip-primrose hybrid is known as the
false oxlip (
Primula × polyantha). ==Great Bardfield Artists==