Midhurst
Midhurst is a market town, parish [3] and also civil parish in West Sussex, England. It pushes the River Rother 20 miles (32 kilometres) inland from the English Channel, and 12 miles (19 kilometres) north of the county town of Chichester. The name Midhurst was first recorded in 1186 as Middeherst, meaning "Middle wooded hillside", or "(place) among the wooded hills". It originates from the Old English words midd (adjective) or mid (preposition), implying "in the middle", plus hyrst, "a wooded hill". The Norman St. Ann's Castle days from about 1120, although the foundations are all that can currently be seen. The castle, the parish church of St. Mary Magdalene and also St. Denis, together with South Pond, the former fish-pond for the castle, are the only three frameworks left from this very early period. The parish church is the earliest building in Midhurst. Simply throughout the River Rother, in the church of Easebourne, is the wreck of the Tudor Cowdray House.