-
Leightonstone was a
hundred of
Huntingdonshire mentioned in the
Domesday Book of 1086. It took its name from the
stone at
Leighton Bromswold where the...
- four
existing divisions of
Norman Cross, Toseland,
Hurstingstone and
Leightonstone,
which from
their ****essment
appear to have been
double hundreds, mentions...
-
Hurst • Woodhurst) •
Warboys •
Wistow (Little
Raveley • Upwood) •
Wyton Leightonstone Alconbury •
Alconbury Weston1 •
Brampton •
Brington •
Buckworth • Bythorn4...
-
townships of
Huntingdon and Godmanchester. The
Sessional Divisions of
Leightonstone and Toseland. The new
county division incorporated the
towns of Huntingdon...
-
Bromswold was
listed in the
Domesday Book of 1086 in the
Hundred of
Leightonstone in Huntingdonshire; the name of the
settlement was
written as Lectone...
- on
local judicial and
taxation matters. The four were
Norman Cross,
Leightonstone, Hurstingstone, and Toseland,
which respectively fill the northern,...
-
listed as
Godmundcestre in the
Domesday Book of 1086 in the
Hundred of
Leightonstone in Huntingdonshire. The
survey records that
there were 26 ploughlands...
-
Chenebaltone and
Kenebaltone in the
Domesday Book of 1086 in the
Hundred of
Leightonstone in Huntingdonshire. The
survey records that
there were 20 ploughlands...
- Kimbolton". standrew-kimbolton.org.uk.
Retrieved 27
October 2017. "The
South Leightonstone Group of
Churches | in the
Deanery of Huntingdon, in the
Diocese of...
- the
deaneries of
Cambridge North and
Cambridge South. the
deanery of
Leightonstone was
merged into the
deanery of
Huntingdon in 2004. In 1851 the diocese...