Portchester
"PORCHESTER, (or Portchester), a parish in the hundred of Portsdown, county Hants, 2 miles S.E. of Fareham, its post town, and 7,-, from Portsmouth. It is a station on the London and South-Western railway. It is situated at the top of Portsmouth harbour under Portsdown Hill, and was the Roman Portus Magnus or Caer Peris of the Britons. A castle of great strength was erected on the old Roman works by the Saxons, who named it Portceastre, and which was rebuilt soon after the Norman conquest, and was held by Queen Margaret in the reign of Edward I. It subsequently came through the Nortons to Thistlethwayte of Southwick, and gives title of baron to the Earl of Carnarvon."[From The National Gazetteer of Great Britain and Ireland (1868) - transcribed by Colin Hinson ©2003]
Cemeteries
- St Mary, Church Lane, Inside Portchester Castle walls, Church of England
Church Records
- St Mary, Church Lane, Inside Portchester Castle walls, Church of England
- Portchester Methodist Church, Castle Street, Methodist
- Our Lady of Walsingham, White Hart Lane, Roman Catholic
You can also perform a more selective search for churches in the Portchester area that are recorded in the GENUKI church database. This will also help identify churches in nearby townships and/or parishes. You also have the option to see the location of the churches marked on a map.
If you keep this page loaded for a very long time and the database is updated since loading it, the church links above may become stale and may display the wrong church. If this happens, reloading this page will correct them.
Gazetteers
- A transcription of the section for Portchester from
the National Gazetteer (1868).
- The entry for Portchester from
A Vision of Britain through time.
- Ask for the gazetteer for a calculation of the distance from Portchester to another place.
History
- The entry for Portchester from British History Online.
Maps
- View maps of Portchester and places within its boundaries.