The area has extensive evidence of
Neolithic settlement and a
Bronze Age burial site was discovered behind the school in the 19th century. Field enclosures on White Hill (a ridge above the village) provide evidence of Roman occupation probably linked to the nearby fortress town of
Cunetio. One possible derivation of the name is from the
Old English composite word
loc(a)-hrycg meaning "a ridge marked by enclosure(s)". At the time of the
Domesday Book of 1086, Lockeridge was owned by Durand of Gloucester and is described as follows:
Durand himself holds LOCKERIDGE. Almær held it TRE, and it paid geld for 2 hides. There is land for 1 plough. Of this 1 hide is in demesne. There is 1 villan and 2 bordars with 1 slave, and of meadow, and of pasture and of woodland. It was worth 40s; now 30s. These two late Anglo-Saxon estates are held to be linked to the cluster of houses at Lockeridge Dene at the southern end of the village, and the eighteenth-century Lockeridge House at the northern end. Lockeridge House is adjacent to Piper's Lane, remnant of a Roman road. Building took place between the two Saxon settlements in the 12th century on the order of the
Knights Templar who acquired one of the estates between 1141 and 1143. In 1155–1156 it acquired land in Rockley to build a
Preceptory. Lockeridge is therefore something rare in Britain, namely a planned Templar village. The collapse of the nearby settlement of Shaw as a result of the Plague may have triggered growth as Lockeridge was situated at an intersection of a major east–west route (now the A4) and a crossing of the Pewsey Downs. The Templar link explains the absence (rare in Wiltshire villages) of a church. The settlement expanded from a hamlet to a village in the 1870s when
Sir Henry Meux sited his estate office (Gypsy Furlong) and the estate yard (Yardacre) in the village. Houses, a school and a pub were built at the same time. In consequence of this history there are three main architectural styles in the village. • Sarsen stone, generally painted or left rough-hewn, and thatched with wheat or wheat-reed mix. • Victorian estate architecture built of dressed stones or Wiltshire redbrick with sarsen banding. Many of these are the work of
C.E. Ponting, architect to the Meux estate in the 1870s. • 20th-century solid brick council housing and in-fill in a variety of styles, in the main street and on Back Lane and Rhyls Lane. == Governance ==