's 1724 engraving of the Roman mosaic at the Beaconsfield villa
Antiquity Evidence that the area has been inhabited since at least the
Bronze Age includes a
barrow about south of the village. Under
Roman rule, a
villa connected to a
road was located southeast of the village at what is now Beaconsfield Farm. The villa was rediscovered in the 17th century and excavations have subsequently revealed a
hypocaust and
mosaic floors,
pottery from the 3rd and 4th centuries, and some evidence that Roman occupation may have begun early in the 2nd century.
Middle Ages The main settlement moved to its present location in the
Anglo-Saxon era.
Ælfric of Abingdon held the
manor of Great Tew by 990 and became
Archbishop of Canterbury in 995. Ælfric died in 1005, leaving Great Tew to
Saint Alban's Abbey.
William the Conqueror granted the manor to his half-brother
Odo,
Bishop of Bayeux. It was recorded among Odo's estates in the
Domesday Book in 1086.
Modernity Tew Great Park was created before the latter part of the 16th century. Sir
Lawrence Tanfield,
Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer, bought Great Tew estate in 1611 from Edward Rainsford. He deprived the villagers of timber, causing some cottages to fall into disrepair. Tanfield enclosed part of Great Tew's lands in 1622. However, most of the parish's
common lands remained unenclosed until an
enclosure act for Great Tew was passed in 1767. After Tanfield died in 1626, followed by his wife Elizabeth in 1629, Great Tew passed to his young grandson
Lucius Cary, 2nd Viscount Falkland. It was demolished in about 1800, but surviving adjacent structures from about 1700 include stables, a
dovecote and a stone gate piers. In 1780 and 1793 Great Tew estate was bought by
George Stratton, who had made a fortune in the
East India Company. He died in March 1800 and was succeeded by his son
George Frederick Stratton. The manor house had evidently fallen into disrepair, as the Strattons lived in a smaller
Georgian dower house slightly to the south of it, and had the manor house demolished in about 1803. In 1808 George Frederick Stratton engaged the Scots
botanist and
garden designer John Loudon, who laid out north and south drives in Great Tew Park and planted ornamental trees in and around the village, which still enhance its appearance. Great Tew stayed with the family until M. E. Boulton died without heirs in 1914. who reopened the local ironstone quarry in 2000.
Rupert Murdoch and
Jerry Hall acquired the manor in 2020; the building was "in a derelict condition" but the couple planned a restoration to include a domed roof. In recent years the Great Tew Estate has hosted events through the year, including the Cornbury Music Festival. ==Parish church==