Marnhull and Hinton St Mary
Walk directions
Walk up from the church and turn right in front of the White Horse. Pass a side street then shortly fork left by Barley Yard House. Reaching a sharp bend, leave through a waymarked gate on the right. Turn left and follow a track downhill towards a wood. Wind right and left to carry on along a rough track within a belt of trees. Bearing slightly right, continue across a field to a plank bridge. Maintain the heading across another field to an indented corner and bear left beside trees screening a small water treatment works. Cross a track to a stiled bridge and head up by the right hedge to Eastwell Lane.
Go right to a bend by a cottage and turn off left along a farm track. At a junction, swing left and then right, later keeping ahead past stock sheds at Church Farm to emerge at Marnhull.
Head left past The Crown Inn and keep straight on at a junction along New Street.
After 0.5 miles (800m), opposite Kentisworth Road, turn left along a lane. At Goddard’s Farm, bear right to skirt a pond and walk up beside the left hedge to a gap. Wind through consecutive gates and follow the right hedge, slipping over a stile at its end and continuing beyond the end of the left fence to a gate in the corner. Keep going by the right hedge to come out at Mowes Lane.
Joining a path beside the gate opposite, bypass a farmyard to the field behind. Head away by the left boundary to a gate and stile in the corner. The ongoing path leads past a wooded pool to continue at the left edge of another field. Through consecutive gates at the bottom corner, go right at the top of the next field. Pass through a gap and swing left above a final field to cross a stile and emerge onto Cott Mill Lane.
Walk downhill for 150yds (137m) then leave left on a bridleway signed to Wood Lane. Wind left and right to follow a grass track through a plantation. Where the track swings left, continue forward to emerge at the edge of a field. Go left up the edge of the field and then bear right. Reaching a stile, cross it and then another and bear right along the hedge in the adjacent field. Turn within the corner to a gate, exiting onto a track between hedges that leads out left to a lane at the edge of Hinton St Mary.
Take the lane opposite and go first right. On the bend, leave ahead through a metal field gate and cross a small field to a gap in the hedge/fence behind houses. Walk out to a street that returns you to the junction beside the White Horse.
Additional information
Terrain
- Field paths and tracks, some lanes
Landscape
- Rolling farmland
Dog friendliness
- Beware of electric fences in fields; control needed through farmyards and care across high bridges
Parking
- On Ridgeway Lane by St Mary's church
Toilets en route
- None en route
About the walk
With church, pub and manor house surrounded by a charming miscellany of gardened cottages, some dating back to the 16th century, Hinton St Mary is just one of Dorset’s many attractive villages. But it became set apart in 1963, when the village blacksmith uncovered fragments of an extensive Roman... mosaic. Excavation revealed an almost complete floor, extending across two rooms and combining classical hunting and pagan scenes with a central roundel portraying the bust of a man before a Chi-Rho symbol. Interpreted as the image of Christ, it is one of the earliest known representations and the only such floor mosaic. The rooms are thought to have been part of a villa, possibly a dining or reception room or perhaps the private chapel of the villa’s owner. The mosaic is now in the British Museum. Before the Dissolution of the Monasteries, the village was a lay-settlement and small nunnery of St Mary’s Abbey Church at Shaftsbury. The estate was eventually bought by Sir William Pitt, who held high office successively under Elizabeth I, James I and Charles I, and has passed through various branches of the family to the present day. One of the most notable family members was Augustus Pitt Rivers, who, after a career in the army, inherited the Cranborne estates. Already a passionate collector of ethnographic artefacts, he began a methodical excavation of local prehistoric sites, recording the finds and their context. He was appointed the first Inspector of Ancient Monuments and is regarded as a founder of modern archaeology. More scattered, Marnhull lies to the north on a limestone prominence that provided stone for many of the buildings. Village history begins with Saxon charters of the 10th century, but archaeological excavation in the locality has discovered Iron Age and Roman settlements together with a cemetery containing over 20 Romano-British skeletons. Nash Court, just to the north, originally belonged to Glastonbury Abbey, but Henry VIII bestowed it upon Catherine Parr, his final wife. Overlooking Blackmore Vale, the area was traditionally given to dairy farming, and in Thomas Hardy’s Tess of the D’Urbervilles, Marnhull became ‘Marlott’, the birthplace of his ill-fated heroine, who buried her baby in the churchyard of St Peter’s. The tale wanders across the Wessex countryside before reaching its tragic climax at Stonehenge.
Read more
Been on this walk?
Send us photos or a comment about this route. Or recommend a route of your own.
Walking in Safety
Read our tips to look after yourself and the environment when following this walk.
Get an AA guide
Explore our range of ‘50 Walks in’ guides - they’re the ideal companion for a ramble.
Been on this walk?
Send us photos or a comment about this route. Or recommend a route of your own.
Walking in Safety
Read our tips to look after yourself and the environment when following this walk.
Get an AA guide
Explore our range of ‘50 Walks in’ guides - they’re the ideal companion for a ramble.
About the area
Dorset is made up of rugged coastlines, high chalk downlands and a chain of picturesque villages and seaside towns that make up Britain’s Jurassic Coast, a UNESCO World Heritage Site and Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, noted for its layers of shale and numerous fossils embedded in the rock. Hidden gems of Dorset can be found down winding, country lanes that lead to snug villages hidden from view.
Nearby places to stay
View all (8)
Self-Catering
Hammoon Manor Barn
★★★★★
"A perfect blend of old countryside charm and contemporary style...."
- Total units: 1
- Private garden
- Lawn area
- Garden furniture
Self-Catering
Hammoon Manor Barn
★★★★★
"A perfect blend of old countryside charm and contemporary style...."
- Private garden
- Lawn area
- Garden furniture
- BBQ on site
Self-Catering
Duncliffe Chalet at Stour Cross Farm
★★★★
"Scandinavian-style luxury close to Dorset's most popular attractions...."
- Total units: 1
- Private garden
- Lawn area
- Garden furniture
Nearby places to stay
Hammoon Manor Barn
Hammoon Manor offers luxurious self-catering accommodation, located in the heart of Thomas Hardy’s ‘Vale of Little Dairies’ and two and a half hours from Central London. It's surrounded...
★★★★★ Rating
Hammoon Manor Barn
Hammoon Manor offers luxurious self-catering accommodation, located in the heart of Thomas Hardy’s ‘Vale of Little Dairies’ and two and a half hours from Central London. It's surrounded...
★★★★★ Rating
Duncliffe Chalet at Stour Cross Farm
Superb Scandinavian-style chalets with contemporary interiors and spectacular views, all on a working dairy farm. Duncliffe Chalet has its own private hot tub with fully enclosed gazebo...
★★★★ Rating
Melbury Chalet Deepest Dorset
With glorious views over green fields and luxurious fittings within, Melbury Chalet is a Scandinavian-style, three-bedroom building that makes an excellent base for family or friends. I...
★★★★ Rating
Duncliffe Chalet
With glorious views over green fields and luxurious fittings within, Melbury Chalet is a Scandinavian-style, three-bedroom building that makes an excellent base for family or friends. I...
★★★★ Rating
Loose Reins
A chance to embrace the pioneer spirit in charming frontier-style porched cedar cabins and canvas lodges in a great location near Shillingstone in Dorset. Comfort assured, with fully eq...
★★★★★ Rating
Grosvenor Arms
The Grosvenor Arms is a boutique hotel in Shaftesbury. With Georgian features, contemporary design, and fabulous seasonal menus, it is a quality place to eat, drink and stay in the anci...
★★★★ Rating
Courtyard Barn - Lois Barns
A perfect place for a holiday with family or friends, Courtyard Barn has a lovely south-facing garden that looks out over farmland, and is ideal for alfresco dining. Inside is a games r...
★★★★★ Rating
Places to eat nearby View all


