Steeple Langford has a rich archaeological history. The
Iron Age hillfort known as
Yarnbury Castle is in the far north of the parish, and another known as
Grovely Castle lies to the south of Little Langford.
Neolithic finds in the parish include flint tools, a polished axehead and pottery, as well as a
bowl barrow and the remains of a
round barrow; from the
Bronze Age axeheads, a
palstave and a chisel; in the southwest of the parish, a
Mesolithic flint axe and Romano-British brooches have been found. The
Domesday Book records that: Sir Lawrence St Martin, a descendant of Waleran, died
c 1320 in possession of 'Stupel Langford'. In the time of
King Edward III, John de Steeves held Steeple Langford in return for a
knight's service.
Arthur Collier, a
metaphysician, a native of the parish and
rector from 1704 to 1732, is notable for his
Clavis Universalis (1713). As a child of about ten in the 1770s,
William Cobbett spent a whole summer in the village, and his happy memories of his stay led him to take one of his 'Rural Rides' into Wiltshire some fifty years later. However, he wrote in 1826 that In June 1795, it was reported that some 120 sheep had been killed at Steeple Langford by a freak
hailstorm. The
Salisbury to Westbury branch line was built across the parish, bisecting Little Langford and passing close to Hanging Langford.
Langford station was opened at the same time as the line, in June 1856, but closed in October 1857. The
Warminster to Salisbury road running through Steeple Langford village was designated as the
A36 in the 20th century, and became part of the Southampton-Bristol route. The road was rerouted close to the north of the village in 1989. The population of the parish was 501 in 2001, much the same as in 1801, having peaked at 628 in 1861. A detailed history of the parish is contained in
Volume XV: Amesbury hundred and Branch and Dole hundred (1995) of
A History of the County of Wiltshire.
Bathampton Domesday Book recorded two estates under the name Wylye, which were later known as Batham Wylye; the name Bathampton came into use in the 15th century. Two groups of buildings in the west of the parish, each including a manor house, were known as Great Bathampton and Little Bathampton. They rebuilt the manor house in 1694 in rubble stone and dressed limestone, as a U-shaped building with a seven-bay front. Now called Bathampton House, it is Grade II* listed. Most of the interior is 18th-century, and in a drawing room is a fine white marble fireplace in late-18th
Gothick style with elaborate carving, said to have come from
Fonthill. At the site of Little Bathampton, the late 17th-century farmhouse is known as Ballington Manor.
Hanging Langford Hanging Langford is a street village, probably a planned layout, with houses on both sides of the street having rectangular plots of roughly equal size behind them. By 1066, the land had been divided into two equal estates. A reading room was built c. 1913 and continues in use as the parish hall. ==Religious sites==