Templecombe is a village in Somerset, England, situated on the A357 road five miles south of Wincanton, east of Yeovil, and west of Salisbury. It is in the Blackmore Vale.
Templecombe is the main settlement in the civil parish of Abbas and Templecombe, along with the hamlet of Combe Throop. Historically, Temple Combe was the southern part of the village and Abbas Combe the northern part, but in modern usage Templecombe is the common name for the whole settlement.
The parish had a population of 1,657 at the 2021 census,Table PP002 - Sex, from up from 1,560 in 2011.
Abbas Combe was recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086–7 as Cumbe, when it was held by the church of St Edward, Shaftesbury.
The other manor within the parish was held by Godwinson, but after the Norman Conquest, was given to Bishop Odo of Bayeux. It was his descendant Serlo FitzOdo who granted it to the Knights Templar.
The parish was part of the Hundred of Horethorne.
Templecombe derives its name from Combe Templariorum, after the Knights Templar who established Templecombe Preceptory in the village in 1185.'House of Knights Templar: The preceptory of Templecombe', A History of the County of Somerset: Volume 2 (1911), pp. 146–147. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=40936. Date accessed: 27 January 2008. Grand Priory of Knights Templar in England and Wales After they were suppressed in 1312 it was granted to the Knights Hospitaller who held it until the dissolution of the monasteries, after which it was acquired by Richard Duke (d. 1572) of Otterton, Devon. An attempt to discover 'the village of the templars' was made by the Time Team television series, in a programme first shown in 1996. Late in the investigation, an old tithe map revealed the location of the Templar site, and an old stone boundary wall was found to be still standing high.
The Manor House in the high street was built in the 17th century on the site of a medieval building. Richard Boyle, 1st Earl of Cork bought Temple Coombe Manor in 1637 for £20,000. The Earl already owned Stalbridge Manor in Dorset, close by. Boyle also purchased Annery House near Bideford in 1640 for £5000.
Somerset by G.W. Wade and J.H. Wade () states, "Templecombe (or Abbas Combe), an inconsiderable village at the S.E. extremity of the county, with an important station on the S. & D. and L. & S.W. lines. The church is ancient but uninteresting, and seems to have been considerably altered. It contains a curious E.E. font. The tower is somewhat peculiar, and forms the S. porch. On the rising ground at the S. of the village are the remains of a preceptory of the Knights Templars, founded in the 12th century by Serlo Fitz-Odo. From this foundation the place takes its name. A long building, which was perhaps once the refectory, but which is now used as a barn, will be noticed abutting on a farm-house along the road to Milborne Port. In an orchard at the back of the farm are the ruins of a small chapel."
It was found by Time Team that the long building post-dated the preceptory, having timbers dated to ; but that the chapel, since demolished, and with only footings remaining, was authentically Templar.
Lady Theodora Guest funded the building of Templecombe's "Merthyr Guest Cottage hospital" which opened in 1906. It had over 100 in-patients in 1947, when it became an NHS maternity hospital, and operated until 1974.
The village is in Somerset unitary district, administered by Somerset Council. The village is part of 'Blackmoor Vale' electoral division for council elections. Historically it was in Wincanton Rural District from 1894 until local government reorganisation in 1974. It was then in South Somerset district until the creation of Somerset unitary district in 2023.
It is part of the Glastonbury and Somerton constituency in the House of Commons.
The water treatment centre off Temple Lane, east of the village, is operated by Wessex Water. The original pumping station was built by the Temple Combe and Henstridge joint water committee in the 1940s.
In Templecombe stands the United Reformed Church (next door to the former The Royal Wessex, Public House). This building has been on the site for over 150 years: the current building dates from 1834 and was originally a congregational church.
Valerie Singleton, TV presenter, lives in Templecombe.
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