Chippinghurst Manor is a Grade II listed country house in Oxfordshire, England, situated about 8 miles (13 km) south-east of Oxford.
[1][2] The name of "Chippinghurst" manor means "the hill of Cibba" and appeared as "Cibbaherste" in the 1086 Domesday Book.
[3] The Saxon settlement there was part of the estate granted to Abingdon in 956, but by 1086 the hamlet and land, assessed as an area of three hides, had passed to William, Count of Évreux.
[1][4] It was extended in 1937 by R. Fielding Dodd for James McDougall, of the flour firm, who acquired the property in 1931.
[3] The main house is built of coursed limestone rubble with ashlar stone quoins.