Official Name: | Taston |
Static Image Name: | The Standing Stone at Taston - geograph.org.uk - 975027.jpg |
Static Image Caption: | Thor Stone (left foreground), with the Medieval preaching cross beyond |
Coordinates: | 51.904°N -1.474°W |
Os Grid Reference: | SP3621 |
Label Position: | bottom |
Civil Parish: | Spelsbury |
Shire District: | West Oxfordshire |
Shire County: | Oxfordshire |
Region: | South East England |
Country: | England |
Constituency Westminster: | Witney |
Post Town: | Chipping Norton |
Postcode District: | OX7 |
Postcode Area: | OX |
Dial Code: | 01608 |
Website: | Spelsbury Parish Council |
Taston is a hamlet in Spelsbury civil parish, about 1.6miles north of Charlbury and 4miles southeast of Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire.
Taston is about 3miles north of the Akeman Street Roman road.
The survey of English Place-Names records Taston as Thorstan in 1278–9, Thorstane in 1316, Torstone in 1492 and Taston in 1608–9.[1]
The name element Thor is a reference to the Norse God Thor. The name element stan is from Old English stān (stone). The toponym might be Thor stone or Thor's stone.
The Thor Stone is a monolithic standing stone that stands about seven-foot tall in the centre of Taston.[2] It is a menhir, meaning that it was manhandled there by humans. A local myth maintains that the stone portrays the image of a thunderbolt, and that it was created by a thunderbolt from Thor himself.[3] [4] It is a scheduled monument.
At the centre of Taston are the base and broken shaft of a Medieval preaching cross.[5] It is a Grade II* listed building.
Middle Farmhouse is a house built of coursed rubble in the 17th and early 18th centuries. Part of the roof is of Stonesfield slate. The farmstead has a four-bay barn that was built of stone early in the 18th century and altered in 1884.
The Firkins is a small house near Thorsbrook Spring. It is built of rubble and probably dates from early in the 18th century.
At Thorsbrook Spring, about southeast of the preaching cross, is a Victorian Gothic Revival memorial fountain. It was built in 1862 in memory of Henrietta, Viscountess Dillon, wife of Henry Dillon, 13th Viscount Dillon.
"...a hefty seven foot stone that leans dramatically into a garden wall in the centre of the village. One story goes that it was a thunderbolt thrown by Thor himself..."