image showing the layout of Old Sodbury Camp The name of the village is recorded in
Anglo-Saxon (in the
dative case) as
Soppanbyrig = "Soppa's fort", and in the
Domesday Book of 1086 as
Sopeberie. The name may refer to the Iron Age
hillfort just to the north-east of the village. The fort, perched on the edge of the
Cotswold escarpment, is enclosed on three sides by two parallel earthworks, and is open to the west, commanding an impressive view of the Frome Valley, Severn Vale and the Welsh mountains. The earth walls enclose an area of , and are usually kept mown by the local farmer (the fort is in private hands, but accessible). The fort can be reached by footpath from the
A46 road, and through the village from below via the Cotswold Way. The
Romans strengthened the fort for use as a stronghold to support their western frontier. In AD 577 the Saxon army is thought to have used the fort as a camp before the
Battle of Deorham, a few miles to the south. Bishop
Milred (743–755) granted the land at Soppenbyrig to Eanbald, and he to Eastmund, on condition that there was a man in Holy Orders, and worthy of them, in their family, but if otherwise, the lands would pass back to the See of Worcester. In 888 the covenant failed; however, the land was granted to Eadnoth in perpetuity for the rent of 15 shillings, payable to the
See of Worcester yearly at
Tetbury. In Edward the Confessor's reign, the manor formed part of the estate of
Brictric, Earl of Gloucester.
King Edward IV camped here in 1471 before attacking the army of
Margaret of Anjou at the
Battle of Tewkesbury, which he won decisively. == Church ==