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- Q640271 subject Q7400233.
- Q640271 subject Q8899984.
- Q640271 abstract "Durrington is a neighbourhood of the Borough of Worthing in West Sussex, England. It is situated near the A27 road, 2.3 miles (3.7 km) northwest of the town centre.Durrington means 'Dēora's farmstead', Dēora presumably being the name of a Saxon settler. In common with many neighbouring settlements during the Saxon era, the local people also had land in the Weald, which would have been used for seasonal pasture for animals. Their land was at 'Dēoringa wīc' (modern-day Drungewick, in the parish of Loxwood).Durrington was first recorded in 934 as a Saxon estate. In that year, King Athelstan granted some of the land to one of his thegns. By the time of the Domesday survey in 1086, Robert le Sauvage—lord of the manor of nearby Broadwater—held the land. The civil and ecclesiastical parish was smaller than the Saxon estate: it extended for about 2 miles (3.2 km) from north to south and 0.7 miles (1.1 km) from east to west.The Domesday survey recorded that Durrington had "a church, eight acres of meadow and a wood of ten hogs". The church had existed since Saxon times, no later than the 11th century, but little is known of it: the structure was probably built of plaster, wattle and daub and thatch, in common with other churches of the era. It was dedicated to St Nicholas. In about 1265, the church was rebuilt and rededicated to Thomas Becket. The new design, a simple two-cell building, had a 56 by 29 feet (17.1 m × 8.8 m) nave and a 23 by 19 feet (7.0 m × 5.8 m) chancel separated by a rood screen, above which was a crucifix. There was also a wall-mounted stone pulpit, a stone altar, a series of tall, pointed windows high in the walls, an unadorned stone font and a short wooden steeple—little more than an extended belfry—extending from the nave roof. The new church was still a chapelry of St Andrew's Church at nearby West Tarring: this meant that it was served and administered by clergy from that church, and most of the parish's tithes were paid to St Andrew's. It was not an independent parish church.In 1643, during the English Civil War, St Symphorian's Church—Durrington's Anglican church—was partially destroyed by Roundhead soldiers after the Royalist vicar had supposedly tried to gain support for the Royalist cause amongst his parishioners. The church remained ruined until 1915 when a new church was built, which included some of the original stones.Durrington was also the location of the first civil partnership formed under the Civil Partnership Act 2004, taking place on 5 December 2005 between Matthew Roche and Christopher Cramp at St Barnabas' Hospice.".
- Q640271 areaCode "01903".
- Q640271 country Q145.
- Q640271 country Q23287.
- Q640271 district Q671348.
- Q640271 gridReference "TQ118052".
- Q640271 populationTotal "5528".
- Q640271 postalCode "BN13 0".
- Q640271 thumbnail Durrington_Community_Centre_-_geograph.org.uk_-_616923.jpg?width=300.
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- Q640271 dialCode "1903".
- Q640271 officialName "Durrington".
- Q640271 osGridReference "TQ118052".
- Q640271 population "5528".
- Q640271 postcodeDistrict "BN13 0".
- Q640271 shireCounty Q23287.
- Q640271 shireDistrict Q671348.
- Q640271 point "50.83573 -0.4124".
- Q640271 type Place.
- Q640271 type Location.
- Q640271 type Place.
- Q640271 type PopulatedPlace.
- Q640271 type Settlement.
- Q640271 type Thing.
- Q640271 type SpatialThing.
- Q640271 type Q486972.
- Q640271 comment "Durrington is a neighbourhood of the Borough of Worthing in West Sussex, England. It is situated near the A27 road, 2.3 miles (3.7 km) northwest of the town centre.Durrington means 'Dēora's farmstead', Dēora presumably being the name of a Saxon settler. In common with many neighbouring settlements during the Saxon era, the local people also had land in the Weald, which would have been used for seasonal pasture for animals.".
- Q640271 label "Durrington, West Sussex".
- Q640271 lat "50.83573".
- Q640271 long "-0.4124".
- Q640271 depiction Durrington_Community_Centre_-_geograph.org.uk_-_616923.jpg.
- Q640271 name "Durrington".