•
Long barrows and later
Bronze age round barrows show the area was settled from at least 3000 BC. 500BC to 40AD - increase in social organisation and construction of earthworks such as Knollbury Camp and
Grim's Ditch. • During
Roman times, the region was within a road network with
Akeman Street crossing it. Remains of Roman villas have been found at
North Leigh and
Stonesfield. • After the decline of Roman control much of the open land reverted to woodland. Later Saxon settlements were restricted to the woodland edge or large clearings. • In the reign of Ethelred II (978-1016) a royal hunting lodge was established at Woodstock. • Wychwood was recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086. The king had hunting rights over the whole area designated as
Royal Forest, even though much of the land was held by various lords. Only the woodland at
Woodstock (later Blenheim),
Cornbury and a large area near Kingstanding Farm belonged directly to the king. • By 1300 Wychwood was divided into 3 portions, centred on the parks of
Woodstock,
Cornbury and a part which included the Bishop of Winchester's Witney estate. • In 1704 Woodstock Park was given by the Crown to the
Duke of Marlborough. By then Cornbury was in private hands. • In 1778 the navy procured 500 trees from Wychwood yet by 1792 a report by the Crown Commissioners found only 173 oaks of ship building quality, with fences down, coppices full of deer, cattle and swine, and the locals helping themselves to firewood. • In 1857 the 10 sq. miles of Wychwood remaining as
Royal Forest was taken out of Forest Law by a disafforestation act of Parliament. Ancient forest rights, granted to commoners, were ended and the commoners compensated. Within 2 years 2000 acres of woodland was converted to farmland and housing and 10 miles of new roads were built. Seven new farmsteads were built, including King's Standing Farm. The parish of
Leafield and its church dates from this time. The remaining woodland was enclosed in 1867 and still exists. Wychwood was formerly an
extra-parochial area, in 1858 Wychwood became a separate civil parish, on 1 April 1949 the parish was abolished and merged with
Cornbury Park to form
Cornbury and Wychwood, part also went to
Leafield. In 1931 the parish had a population of 253. ==Foresters of Wychwood==