Etchingham
Etchingham (population 806) is a town and also civil church in the Rother area of East Sussex in southern England. The village lies roughly 15 miles (24 kilometres) southeast of Royal Tunbridge Wells in Kent as well as 13 miles (21 km) northwest of Hastings, on the A265, half a mile west of its joint with the A21. Etchingham train station is on the Hastings Line to London Charing Cross and Cannon Street. Etchingham was a chateau a long time prior to the Norman conquest of 1066; after this time the mansion was taken over by the Normans. In 1166 it was delegated the de Achyngham (Etchingham) family, that were widely known landowners of the moment. The Etchingham household papers record that William was so delighted with his right-hand man that he gave him the land now known as Etchingham. The moated manor house, time out of mind destroyed, stood at the point now occupied by the London to Hastings train line. A few of the stone from the mansion was possibly used in the building of the terminal buildings. There is one legend that a fantastic bell lay at the end of the moat surrounding the church and manor, and that it would never ever be seen till six yoke of white oxen were offered drag it up. Centuries have passed by, the moat is long gone and also no bell has appeared. The 14th-century church was originally constructed within the premises of the chateau; proof of the moat can still be seen.