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Abson
Abson, South Gloucestershire, Church of St James the Great - geograph.org.uk - 96069.jpg
St James the Great Church, Abson
Abson is located in Gloucestershire
Abson
Abson
Population 1,930 (Wick and Abson) (2021)
• London 113 mi (182 km) E
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town BRISTOL
Postcode district BS30
Dialling code 0117
Police Avon and Somerset
Fire Avon
Ambulance Great Western
EU Parliament South West England
UK Parliament
  • Thornbury and Yate
List of places
UK
England
Gloucestershire
51°28′18″N 2°25′36″W / 51.471534°N 2.426714°W / 51.471534; -2.426714

Abson is a small village in South Gloucestershire, England, it forms part of the civil parish of Wick and Abson.

Location

Abson is located on a minor road between the villages of Wick and Pucklechurch. It is a mainly nucleated in pattern with some additional outlying farms and settlements. The centre of the village is a small village green and the church.

Abson is part of the Church of England parish of Wick and Abson, and is part of the parliamentary constituency of Thornbury and Yate.

History

The name Abson is a corruption of Abbotston - a place belonging to the Abbot. This was the Abbot of Glastonbury, as the manor of Pucklechurch (including Abson and other surrounding villages) was given to the Abbot after the murder of King Edmund at neighbouring Pucklechurch. In the 16th century the village was called Abston, and was since shortened to Abson.

Blue Lodge, one of the houses, was once the home of Anna Sewell, author of Black Beauty. Whilst staying there she witnessed a man killed by a cart and this was incorporated into the novel.

The Church

Abson is centred on the church. It is dedicated to St James the Great, and is a Grade I listed building, as are the churchyard walls (with distinctive Bristol Black coping) and many of the graves. The neighbouring farmhouse, stables and barn (which have been converted into homes) are all Grade II listed.

There are two fragments of carved knotwork masonry on the walls as well as a figure thought once to have been a Sheela na Gig, now understood to be a carving of a male figure, high on the East wall. This figure is believed to date from Saxon or early Norman times.

The church contains an early 17th-century pulpit with a sounding board and 18th-century woodwork.

The belltower contains six bells which are still rung by hand.

Location grid

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