Clewer (also known as Clewer Village) is an ecclesiastical parish and an area of Windsor, in the ceremonial county of Berkshire, England. Clewer makes up three wards of the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead, namely Clewer North, Clewer South and Clewer East.
By the time of the Norman Conquest, there was a Manorialism of Clewer, mentioned in the Domesday Book as Clivore and recorded as having a church and water mill. It was from here that William I took the lands on which he built his fort, which became Windsor Castle. The Manor of Clewer continued to receive a rent of 12 shillings per annum from the The Crown for this land until the 16th century. The present St Andrew's Church is of Norman construction and it is traditionally believed that William I habitually attended mass there, as there was no chapel within the original castle. It has a 14th-century chantry chapel to the memory of the second wife of the hero of the Hundred Years' War, Sir Bernard Brocas. The family lived in the sub-manor of Clewer Brocas until rebellious activities obliged them to retreat to obscurity at Beaurepaire in Sherborne St John.
The Clewer Park area of Clewer Village is where the former home of Sir Daniel Gooch once stood. It was at Clewer that Charles Thomas Wooldridge murdered his wife Laura Ellen; the execution of Wooldridge in 1896 was immortalised in Oscar Wilde's The Ballad of Reading Gaol. Hatch Lane is the site of the former Community of St John Baptist, sometimes known as the Clewer Sisters; the convent closed in 2001 when the community moved to Oxfordshire.
In 1891 the civil parish had a population of 9766. In 1894 the parish was split with the part in New Windsor Municipal Borough becoming Clewer Within and the Rural district part becoming Clewer Without.
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