Loxley, Warwickshire

From Wikishire
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Loxley
Warwickshire

Loxley Hall
Location
Grid reference: SP256526
Location: 52°10’18"N, 1°37’35"W
Data
Population: 399  (2011)
Postcode: CV35
Local Government
Council: Stratford-on-Avon

Loxley is a village in Warwickshire, near Stratford-upon-Avon. It is a little place: the population at the 2011 census was just 399.

The village is first mentioned in the late 8th century, in a charter by which King Offa of Mercia gave it to the Cathedral at Worcester.

The Domesday Book records the community as including a resident priest. Ownership later passed to Kenilworth Abbey. The parish church was consecrated in 1286, built on the foundation of the earlier Anglo-Saxon church.

In 1538, after the Dissolution of the Monasteries, Loxley manor was owned by Robert Croft, later passing to the Underhill family and in 1664 to Edward Nash of East Greenwich. A village school was built in the 1830s. In the 1850s, the former parish lands were divided between seven farms.

In 1910 the village had 59 households. As of 2011, there were 150 households with a total population of 399.

Legend

While the Robin Hood is mostly associated with Loxley, Yorkshire, Graham Phillips and Martin Keatman in their Robin Hood The Man Behind The Myth (1995) suggested that a certain Robert Fitz Oto of Loxley manor was "the true Robin Hood".[1] Historian David Baldwin in his Robin Hood: The English Outlaw Unmasked (2010) proposed Roger Godberd, who is buried in Loxley.[2]

Outside links

References

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Loxley, Warwickshire)
  1. In the Footsteps of Robin Hood, Vhannel4.com, accessed February 2010
  2. PARSONS, CHRIS (2 April 2011). "Is this the grave of Robin Hood? Historian claims farmer buried in an unmarked tomb is the outlaw behind the legend". Daily Mail. Retrieved 18 August 2013.