There are remains of several
bowl barrows on the downland in the south of the parish, Medieval
strip lynchets can be seen on the north-facing slope of Urchfont Hill.
Domesday Book in 1086 recorded a large settlement of 82 households at
Lerchesfonte, with three mills, and land held by
St Mary's Abbey, Winchester. The land (later as separate estates of Urchfont, Northcombe and Wedhampton) continued in the ownership of the abbey until the
Dissolution in the 1530s. housed an adult education college from 1947 until 2012, when it returned to residential use. Downland in the south of the parish was bought by the War Department in stages from 1897, and today forms part of the military
Salisbury Plain Training Area.
Origin of the name The name of Urchfont is often thought to derive from the phrase "Church Fountain" and is possibly derived from Latin
fons meaning 'spring, fountain, well' (cf.
fount), or the first element may be a lost personal name such as Eohric. Over 100 variations of the spelling are recorded; e.g. Lerchesfonte (1086), Erchesfonte(e) (1175, 1605), Erkesfonte (1175), Archesfunte (font) (1179, 1376, 1426), Ur(i)chesfunte (1242, 1289), Orchesfunte (1259), Orcheffunte (1428), Archfounte al. Urshent (1564), Urchefount al. Urshent (1611), Urshent al. Erchfont (1695). == Parish church ==