Lavant - Origins
The contiguous parishes of East and Mid Lavant are 2¼ miles north of
Chichester; a parish or tithing called West Lavant (Westlouente) has lost its
identity, but was probably on the site of the present Lavant House. The place-
name derives from the river which rises in Singleton and, after tortuous course,
finds its way to Chichester Channel; the word "Lavant" is derived from a British
root meaning 'to glide'. The early forms of the place-name, Loventone,
Lovintune, merely added a -ton ending to the river name, signifying 'a farm on
the Lavant'. The -ton ending seems to have been abandoned during the
13thcentury; the prefixes, East, Mid and West indicate the relative geographical
situations of the parishes. At the time of the Domesday Book, East Lavant was
held by the Archbishop of Canterbury, but no church or priest is mentioned.