Breamore Down northwest of the village has several Bronze Agebowl barrows. There is also a long barrow known as the Giant's Grave, originally 65m long and 26m wide with flanked ditches, it is now partly damaged. Breamore Down also has a mysterious mizmaze on its heights. Argument rages as to whether the Bronze Age people or mediaeval monks were responsible for these patterns cut in the turf.[4]
The name Breamore, recorded as Brumore in 1086, may be derived from Old English "Brommor" meaning "broom(covered) marsh".[6] At an early date the manor of Breamore belonged to the Crown, and in 1086 was part of the royal manor of Rockbourne.[7]
The manor was granted in 1541 to the queen consort, Catherine Howard, and in 1544 to Catherine Parr, who, after the death of Henry VIII, married Thomas Seymour, 1st Baron Seymour of Sudeley, to whom Breamore was granted by Edward VI in 1547. On his execution in 1549 it again passed to the Crown and was granted in 1579 by Elizabeth I to Christopher Hatton. William Dodington purchased from him and died in 1600 leaving a son and heir Sir William. From this date Breamore followed the descent of South Charford until 1741, when Francis Lord Brooke sold it to Samuel Dixon, preliminary to its sale to Sir Edward Hulse.[8]
The church of Saint Mary is an almost complete example of an Anglo-Saxon church.[10] The building consists of a chancel and aisleless nave separated by square central tower. The east window with net like tracery dates from 1340. There is a "leper window" in the north wall. Seven "double-splayed" Saxon windows remain. The chancel arch and arch in west wall of the tower are 15th century. The tower houses four bells cast in late 16th and early 17th centuries. There is an Anglo Saxon inscription dating from the reign of Æthelred the Unready, and a badly mutilated Saxon rood with figures of Our Lady and Saint John.[11]
The priory of Breamore was founded towards the end of the reign of Henry I by Baldwin de Redvers and Hugh his uncle, to whose descendants the advowson belonged. It was apparently visited by Richard II in 1384. Baldwin and Hugh de Redvers endowed their priory of Breamore with certain land in Breamore which formed the nucleus of the manor later known as Breamore Bulborn. Various donors added gifts of adjoining land which were merged in the manor.
Breamore House stands northwest of the church. The original house was a very fine late 16th-century building of brick and stone, but was burnt in 1856. It was restored on the old lines, incorporating such of the old masonry as was left, and now from a short distance still resembles an Elizabethan building.[8]
Breamore stocks
The village stocks can be viewed by the A338 roadside.[12] They were originally at the road junction, but are now opposite the Bat and Ball Hotel. They were restored after being badly damaged by a lorry. The stocks have a whipping post and horizontals with four leg holes.[13] A modern roof has been erected over them.[12]
Breamore Mill
Breamore Mill is on the river Avon on the east side of the village.
Near the mill on the road to Woodgreen village is a Victorian bridge will elaborate cast iron sides.
^ ab"New Forest". Hampshire Treasures. Hampshire County Council. 3 November 2010. pp. 33, 35. Archived from the original on 9 June 2012. Retrieved 29 September 2014.
^ abcd"Parishes: Breamore". A History of the County of Hampshire. University of London & History of Parliament Trust. 1911. pp. 596–602. Retrieved 29 September 2014.
^New Forest. Hampshire Treasures. Vol. 5. Hampshire County Council. 3 November 2010. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 29 September 2014.
^ abNew Forest. Hampshire Treasures. Vol. 5. Hampshire County Council. 3 November 2010. p. 40. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 29 September 2014.
^"Breamore Stocks". Old Hampshire Gazetteer. Retrieved 29 September 2014.