Stanton is derived from the
Old English for "farmstead by the stones", probably after the prehistoric stone circle known as the
Devil's Quoits, southwest of the village. The site is a
scheduled monument. The
Domesday Book of 1086 records that the
manor was held by
Odo,
Bishop of Bayeux. It became Stanton Harcourt after Robert de Harcourt of
Bosworth,
Leicestershire inherited lands of his father-in-law at Stanton in 1191. Its Great Kitchen was built in 1485, possibly incorporating an earlier building. The kitchen is a separate building from the house and is
Grade I listed. The service range attached to the south of the Great Kitchen is also 15th-century. It has been converted into a house, Manor Farmhouse, and is Grade I listed. Pope's Tower in the grounds of Harcourt House was built about 1470–71, probably by the master mason
William Orchard. It is a Grade I listed building. The tower acquired its name centuries later, after the poet
Alexander Pope stayed here in 1717–18 and used its upper room to translate the fifth volume of
Homer's
Iliad. In the summer of 1718 he also wrote the
epitaph to a young couple, John Hewett and Sarah Drew, who were struck by lightning and killed in the parish. The poem is carved on a stone
monument on the outside of the south wall of the nave of St Michael's parish church. ==Parish church==