From the Middle Ages to the present day, parsonages - vicarages and rectories, and later manses, presbyteries and chapel houses - have been amongst the most significant dwellings in every kind
of British community. Their roles have been wide and varied. Architecturally important and ranging from medieval vernacular buildings to the bespoke house designs of leading architects of the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries and the more modest homes of today’s clergy, parsonages are important not only as buildings but for the part they, and their occupants, have played in the
life of local communities and their links with the wider world. This study draws on the evidence of architecture, official documents, private records, literary accounts and contemporary and
modern images to build a picture of parsonages and their occupants.