Rorrington's name is possibly derived from Old English personal name and could be translated as "the estate of Hror". As
Roritune, it was recorded as a manor in the
Domesday Book, when it was held jointly by Robert and Roger
fitz Corbet. There was once a
holy well here, located on the hillside at Rorrington Green. In the mediaeval period it was a place of pilgrimage and there was a small chapel on the site, administered by the canons of St Michael's church in Chirbury and probably dedicated to the Virgin Mary. This may have been the Christianisation of an earlier tradition. Until the 1830s, a "Halliwell Wakes" was held on
Ascension Day, when villagers would process round the hillside, with music and dancing: pins were thrown in the well (
dressed with green boughs, rushes and flowers) for good luck. ==See also==