Originally, Wicken Bonhunt may have been two separate communities, and the name possibly derives from
old English for dairy farm (
wic, pl.
wicum) and huntsmen liable to be summoned (
bann-huntan). Wicken Bonhunt is listed in the
Domesday Book in the
hundred of
Uttlesford as the manors of 'Wica' and 'Banhunta', with 23 households, nine villagers, 11 smallholders and three slaves. In 1238, it is referred to in
subsidy rolls as 'Wykes Bonhunte'. Signs of this early settlement include the 10th- or 11th-century former
Chapel of St Helen in the grounds of Bonhunt Farm close to an
M11 motorway flyover. It is believed to be one of the oldest surviving buildings in the east of England, and an annual service is held at the site. A middle
Saxon settlement of some size was excavated in the fields close to the Chapel in the 1970s, during the construction of the M11, with signs of an early settlement having been spotted in 1967 by a local archeologist. Other listed buildings in the village include the Grade II* 16th-century Brick House. ==Amenities==