Explore 10 deserted villages, that were filled with life centuries ago
In the hidden corners of the UK, where nature slowly reclaims what was once its own, lie deserted villages—silent reminders of lives that were.
- Who owns England? History of England’s land ownership and how much is privately owned today
- Britain’s abandoned coastal villages
These ghostly settlements, often nestled in remote landscapes or perched on the edge of history, tell stories of abandonment, migration, and sometimes tragedy
10 deserted villages
Skara Brae, Orkney
Uncovered by a storm in 1850, Skara Brae is the best preserved Neolithic village site in Europe. In the nine huts revealed, you can even see the furniture and cupboards left from the Stone Age.
We named Skara Brae one of Scotland’s great historic sites
Knowlton, Dorset
Ghost-haunted ruins of a Norman church surrounded by a Neolithic henge and village earthworks. Signposted off the B3078 from Wimborne.
Hound Tor, Devon
The foundation walls of four abandoned 13th century farmsteads are exposed here, sheltering beneath the granite tor. Off the A30, south of Okehampton.
Grimspound, Devon
An almost complete Bronze Age village with the foundations of two dozen circular huts, off the B3212 between Hameldown and Hookney Tors.
Stowe, Buckinghamshire
The medieval village was deserted when the Temple family created a private deer park in the 17th century. A medieval church still remains on the site of the now-lost village at the heart of the Vanbrugh and Bridgeman planned landscape.
Chysauster Village, Cornwall
The most complete and best preserved Iron Age village site in England, with four pairs of courtyard houses along a paved street. North of Penzance.
Imber, Wiltshire
Imber is an eerie deserted village, first recorded in the Domesday Book, within the Army’s training area on Salisbury Plain. Up until 1943 it was an active village, but then the entire population of about 150 was evicted to provide an exercise area for troops preparing for D Day and has been abandoned ever since.
Tyneham, Dorset
Tyneham, near Lulworth on the Dorset Coast Path, is a ghost village abandoned in 1943 when the Ministry of Defence commandeered it for military training. Now part of the Armoured Fighting Vehicles Gunnery School, Tyneham is only accessible when the Lulworth Ranges are open to the public.
Nether Haddon, Derbyshire
The bumps and hollows in the fields opposite Haddon Hall across the A6 as you approach Bakewell are the remains of the village of Nether Haddon. It was depopulated by the Duke of Rutland, although the medieval church still serves as the chapel to the hall.
Burton Dassett, Warwickshire
Now a country park just off the M40 north of Banbury, only the church and a farmhouse remains of a town which was once a rival to the city of Coventry to the north. The beautiful 12th century church is known as “the cathedral in the hills.”