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East Challow is a village and civil parish about west of in the Vale of White Horse, England. Historically it was part of the ecclesiastical parish of , but since 1852 East and have formed their own single ecclesiastical parish. The civil parish was part of until the 1974 boundary changes transferred the Vale of White Horse to .


Etymology
The Challow is first attested in a from 947 (though the earliest surviving copy of the charter is from the 12th century), in the phrase "to Ceawan Hlewe", which can be translated as "to Ceawa's burial mound",Victor Watts, The Cambridge Dictionary of English Place-Names Based on the Collections of the English Place-Name Society (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004), p. 124. where Ceawa is a attested only here and in the place-name .Richard Coates, ' On Some Controversy Surrounding Gewissae / Gewissei, Cerdic and Ceawlin', Nomina, 13 (1989–90), 1–11.John Insley, 'Britons and Anglo-Saxons', in Kulturelle Integration und Personennamen im Mittelalter, ed. by Wolfgang Haubrichs, Christa Jochum-Godglück (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2019), §4. The name appears as Ceveslane (considered to be a mis-spelling of Ceveslaue) in the of 1086. Thirteenth-century variants included Chaulea, Chaulauhe, Chawelawe and Shawelawe.

The "East" element in the name, added to distinguish East Challow from , is first found in 1284 (in the form Est Challowe).


Church and mission

Church of England
The Church of England parish church of was a-12th century Norman building, but the and some masonry of the are now almost the only original features that survive. In the 13th century the and chancel arch were rebuilt, and the and three-bay north aisle were added. The Decorated Gothic south chapel was added early in the 14th century. The was made in the 17th century. In the 18th century the aisle was rebuilt in brick, and a porch was added over a 12th-century doorway.

In 1858 St. Nicolas' was drastically restored, with the aisle and west front rebuilt and the nave re-roofed. The rebuilding of the west front removed a 12th-century west doorway and a 15th-century west window above it. In 1884 the low tower was added at the west end of the aisle. The oak was added in 1905. The church is a Grade II* . St. Nicolas' has two bells, which are not dated, but the smaller was cast by Robert Wells of Aldbourne, Wiltshire, which makes it very likely to be 18th-century.


The Mission
The Mission is a Free Church that was built in 1904.


Transport
East Challow village is on both sides of the A417 road, on its section from Wantage to .

The Wilts & Berks Canal was built east–west across the parish and opened in 1810, to convey Somerset coal through Wiltshire and Berkshire to the Thames. The canal fell into disuse and was abandoned in 1914, but work to restore it has been in progress since the 1970s.

(1983). 9780850333640, Phillimore. .
Parts of its route are now footpaths, and there is a narrow strip of overgrown land between Canal Way and Canal Farm Lane.


Amenities
East Challow has a , the Goodlake Arms, that was once controlled by . , the village ground, hosts some home matches of the Oxfordshire County Cricket Club.


Sources
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