The name Willingale means the nook of land of Willa's people. In
Saxon times, Willingale and neighbouring Shellow Bowells appear to have formed part of the extensive
Roding estate, which subsequently fragmented into multiple
manors and parishes. Willingale had become a separate
vill by the time of the
Domesday Book of 1086 when it was listed as "Willingehala" in the
Dunmow hundred and was split into four estates or manors. No priest or church is mentioned at Willingale in the Domesday Book, but it came to form two
parishes. One of the manors in the Domesday Book had been owned by Hervey of Spain, and that manor became known as Willingale Spain. A church dedicated to St Andrew and All Saints was built in the manor of Willingale Spain; the church is mentioned in documents from around 1120 and the surviving building also dates back to the 12th century. To the north of Willingale Spain was the manor of Willingale Doe, named after the D'Ou or D'Eu family, who had been tenants of the manor in the reign of
Henry II in the 12th century. At that time, a
lord of the manor who made their manor also a parish by providing a church could gain some control over the
tithes payable from the parish and also the
advowson (the right to nominate priests when a vacancy arose in the parish). It seems unlikely that the population of Willingale was ever large enough to need two churches to accommodate all the worshippers, and it is therefore more likely that some dispute led to the lords of the manor of Willingale Doe deciding to build a new church. Writing in the 19th century, the Essex Archaeological Society noted a local legend of two angry sisters as being the reason for the two adjoining churches, but found no direct evidence to corroborate the legend. Willingale Doe and Shellow Bowells became a united
benefice in 1798. In 1924 it was decided that Willingale Spain, Willingale Doe, and Shellow Bowells would be combined into a single
ecclesiastical parish next time a vacancy arose in one of the two benefices. The merged ecclesiastical parish came into effect in 1928. The older St Andrew's Church was subsequently declared redundant and is now in the care of the
Churches Conservation Trust. St Christopher's now serves as the parish church for the united parish. Although Willingale Spain, Willingale Doe, and Shellow Bowells had been united into a single ecclesiastical parish in 1928, they remained separate civil parishes until 1946, when they were likewise merged into a new civil parish called Willingale. ==Notable residents==