Everything about Ludgershall Buckinghamshire totally explained
Ludgershall is a
village in the
Aylesbury Vale district of
Buckinghamshire,
England. It is near the border with
Oxfordshire, about five miles east of
Bicester, four miles west of
Waddesdon. In 2001, the population of the parish was 402.
The name of the village is
Anglo Saxon in origin, and is said to mean "nook with a trapping spear", but this is disputed. It occurs in more than one place in England (see
Ludgershall). In the
Domesday Book of
1086 the village was recorded as
Litlegarsele.
Henry II granted land within the village to the
priory of
Santingfield in
Picardy,
France. It is possible that a hospital was founded on this land, although it's uncertain. In the reign of
Henry VI, when all foreign church possessions were seized by
the Crown, this land was given to
King's College, Cambridge.
Ludgershall was at one time home to the theologian
John Wyclif.
Further Information
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