Domesday Book of 1086 recorded a relatively large settlement of 71 households at
Ocheborne, corresponding to the later
manors of St Andrew and St George. In the
Middle Ages the manor of Ogbourne St George belonged to the
Benedictine Abbey of Bec in
Normandy. Ogbourne Priory was founded in about 1149 as a daughter house of the abbey. For some two hundred years the priory managed all the English estates belonging to the abbey. During World War II, the address of the manor house was used atop a fictitious headed letter from 'Pam' to 'Major Martin' as a part of
Operation Mincemeat, a
disinformation strategy, the idea being that 'no German could resist the "Englishness" of such an address'. ==Buildings==