Difference between revisions of "Higham Gobion"

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(Created page with "{{Infobox town |name=Higham Gobion |county=Bedfordshire |picture=Parish church, Higham Gobion, Beds - geograph.org.uk - 194157.jpg |picture caption=St Margaret's, Higham Gobio...")
 
 
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|LG district=Central Bedfordshire
 
|LG district=Central Bedfordshire
 
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'''Higham Gobion''' is a tiny village in the [[Flitt Hundred]] of [[Bedfordshire]], standing between the villages of [[Shillington, Bedfordshire|Shillington]] and [[Barton-le-Clay]]. The hamlet shares a civil parish with Shillington.
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'''Higham Gobion''' is a tiny village and ancient parish in the [[Flitt Hundred]] of [[Bedfordshire]], standing between the villages of [[Shillington, Bedfordshire|Shillington]] and [[Barton-le-Clay]]. The hamlet has formed part of the civil parish of Shillington since 1985.
  
 
This is a hilltop hamlet, which consists of a church, farm and small industrial unit and one or two houses, gets the second part of its name from the Gobion family, who resided in this area after the Norman invasion of 1066. In the fields a mile north-east of the church are triangular earthworks and mediæval fishponds, all that remain today of a substantial deserted mediæval village. Roman pottery has also been found in the field east of the former Rectory.
 
This is a hilltop hamlet, which consists of a church, farm and small industrial unit and one or two houses, gets the second part of its name from the Gobion family, who resided in this area after the Norman invasion of 1066. In the fields a mile north-east of the church are triangular earthworks and mediæval fishponds, all that remain today of a substantial deserted mediæval village. Roman pottery has also been found in the field east of the former Rectory.
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The parish church, dedicated to St Margaret, dates from around 1300, but was much restored during the Victorian period.
 
The parish church, dedicated to St Margaret, dates from around 1300, but was much restored during the Victorian period.
  
It contains a monument to Dr. Edmund Castell, who died in 1674 and was a Professor of Arabic at Cambridge. He was a rector at Higham during the last years of his life and lived in the adjoining (and much restored), former rectory. There is also a memorial to the Cassels and a set of brasses.
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It contains a monument to Dr Edmund Castell, who died in 1674 and was a Professor of Arabic at Cambridge. He was a rector at Higham during the last years of his life and lived in the adjoining (and much restored), former rectory. There is also a memorial to the Cassels and a set of brasses.
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==
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*{{genuki}} - Description of Higham Gobion in 1831
 
*{{genuki}} - Description of Higham Gobion in 1831
 
*[http://www.acny.org.uk/venue.php?V=7653 St. Margaret Church]
 
*[http://www.acny.org.uk/venue.php?V=7653 St. Margaret Church]
[[File:Higham Cottages, Higham Gobion, Beds - geograph.org.uk - 194163.jpg|left|200px|Higham Cottages]]
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[[File:Higham Cottages, Higham Gobion, Beds - geograph.org.uk - 194163.jpg|left|thumb|200px|Higham Cottages]]

Latest revision as of 12:07, 29 April 2022

Higham Gobion
Bedfordshire
Parish church, Higham Gobion, Beds - geograph.org.uk - 194157.jpg
St Margaret's, Higham Gobion
Location
Grid reference: TL102823
Location: 51°58’55"N, 0°23’38"W
Data
Post town: Hitchin
Postcode: SG5
Dialling code: 01582
Local Government
Council: Central Bedfordshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
Mid Bedfordshire

Higham Gobion is a tiny village and ancient parish in the Flitt Hundred of Bedfordshire, standing between the villages of Shillington and Barton-le-Clay. The hamlet has formed part of the civil parish of Shillington since 1985.

This is a hilltop hamlet, which consists of a church, farm and small industrial unit and one or two houses, gets the second part of its name from the Gobion family, who resided in this area after the Norman invasion of 1066. In the fields a mile north-east of the church are triangular earthworks and mediæval fishponds, all that remain today of a substantial deserted mediæval village. Roman pottery has also been found in the field east of the former Rectory.

Church

The parish church, dedicated to St Margaret, dates from around 1300, but was much restored during the Victorian period.

It contains a monument to Dr Edmund Castell, who died in 1674 and was a Professor of Arabic at Cambridge. He was a rector at Higham during the last years of his life and lived in the adjoining (and much restored), former rectory. There is also a memorial to the Cassels and a set of brasses.

See also

Outside links

Commons-logo.svg
("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Higham Gobion)
Higham Cottages