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High on the hill where St. Michael's
now stands, men have made their homes for more than 2000 years;
they lived here before Christ was born - and before the Romans climbed
this hill to settle here. In ancient times the settlement on this
hill top was called Vorda, Worth or Wrde.
The earliest written record of
the church in Highworth appears in the Doomsday Book, the vast register
of England's landowners, completed in 1086 in the days of William
The Conqueror. In the Doomsday Book we find this statement:
"RADALPHUS, THE PRIEST, HOLDS
THE CHURCH AT WRDE"
There is a record of clergy and
patrons of St Michael's Church from 1290 AD onwards.
In the 12th century
a cruciform church stood on the sight of the present St. Michael's,
according to the late C. E. Ponting, the Wiltshire antiquarian.
The east, north and south arms of that 12th century church
extended to the limits of the present chancel and transepts.
One of the original deep window
openings can be seen in the wall at the left of the altar.

Part of the original structure
appears in the walls of the present chancel and the north transept.
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