The village is known for its
Iron Age chariot burial cemetery at
Wetwang Slack, Earlier in the Domesday Book, there is a fuller description (Folio 302V: Yorkshire) within the listing of the land of the Archbishop of York: A
carucate is the area of land a man with 8 oxen can plough in a season, sometimes cited as around . In Wetwang there were of them available for the tax take (
"geld"). A "plough" was a carucate which was being ploughed, rather than grazed or fallow. A
league is around . After the conquest, Wetwang was waste land held by
Archbishop Thomas. St Nicholas's Church is of
Norman origin and was restored between 1845 and 1902. In 1966, the church was designated a Grade II*
listed building. It is on the
Sykes Churches Trail devised by the East Yorkshire Churches Group. The church has a ring of three bells (tenor in A), the oldest of which (the tenor) dates from .{{cite web Wetwang was once known for its
black swans, after which the village pub, the Black Swan, is named.{{cite web ==Public transport==