Osgodby From The North - Geograph
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Osgodby From The North - Geograph
Osgodby may refer to: Places *Osgodby, Lincolnshire, England * Osgodby, South Kesteven, a hamlet in the parish of Lenton, Keisby and Osgodby, Lincolnshire * Osgodby, coastal North Yorkshire, England * Osgodby, Barlby with Osgodby, North Yorkshire, England * Osgodby, Thirkleby High and Low with Osgodby, Hambleton, North Yorkshire People * Adam Osgodby Adam Osgodby (died 1316) was an English lawyer and administrator. He was born in Osgodby, Selby, and although his early life and career are fairly unknown it is known that he acted as a lawyer for William Hamilton among others. Between 1295 and ...
(died 1316), English lawyer and administrator {{disambig, geo, surname ...
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Osgodby, Lincolnshire
Osgodby is a village and civil parish in the West Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England. The population of the civil parish, including Kingerby, Kirkby and Usselby, and West Rasen in its own civil parish, was 660 at the 2011 census. Osgodby is close to the A1103 and A46 roads, and north-west from the market town of Market Rasen. The parish contains the small villages of Kingerby, Kirkby cum Osgodby, Osgodby itself, Usselby and the hamlet of Bishopbridge. To the north is North Owersby. Nearby to the west is the north–south River Ancholme. The population of the parish is 646. History At the time of ''Domesday Book'' the village consisted of 41 households. There are medieval settlement remains, including a moat, visible as earthworks and thought to be part of Tournay Manor which was established during the 14th century. In 1424 John Tournay was given as a gift land on the south side of Osgodby, but the principal residence of the family was at Caenby. During the Second Wo ...
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Lenton, Keisby And Osgodby
Lenton, Keisby and Osgodby is a civil parish in South Kesteven, Lincolnshire, England. The population of the civil parish at the 2011 census was 187. It is located along the river and in the valleys of the East Glen at its headwaters near Ingoldsby, where several minor streams join together. Geography The highest land at the east and west is a small plateau of a Kellaways Sandstone laid down approximately 161 to 165 million years ago in the Jurassic Period. These lie some 80m above sea level. The East Glen valleys cut through this to a slightly older Blisworth Clay Mudstone layer, exposing thin layers on Kellaways clay and Cornbrash limestone on the way. The whole is overlaid with Quaternary glacial till from the recent Pleistocene. The lowest point in the parish is probably about 45m at the Ford in Osgodby, across the east Glen. The streambeds of the Glen have their own associated alluvial linings of Sand And Gravel, Silt and Clay. - can be zoomed to show the villages The pa ...
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Osgodby, Coastal North Yorkshire
Osgodby is a village and civil parish in the district and county of North Yorkshire, England. Until 2023, it was in the borough of Scarborough. Approximately south of Scarborough off the coastal road, Osgodby was a medieval village with a manor house mentioned in the Domesday Book as ''Asgozbi'' ('Asgaut's farm or estate'). It appears to have grown until the 13th or 14th century and then declined to a sparsely populated farming area by the 19th century. Housing was developed east of the medieval site in the 1930s and again from the 1960s, with buildings of farms on the site of the manor house being converted into a pub and a restaurant. The oldest surviving building is Stuart House, dated 1615. Remnants of a 13th-century chantry chapel of St Leonard have been incorporated into a barn. According to the 2011 UK census, Osgodby parish had a population of 1,248, an increase on the 2001 UK census A nationwide census, known as Census 2001, was conducted in the United Kingd ...
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Osgodby, Barlby With Osgodby
Osgodby is a village in the civil parish of Barlby with Osgodby, in North Yorkshire, England, from Selby. Its neighbouring village is Barlby, which lies directly to the west. The village play area has climbing frames, swings, a slide and a football pitch. There is an Indian takeaway, a builder's merchant, and hairdressing salon. It also has a large garden centre and a country pub called 'The Wadkin Arms'. There is a pond opposite the village play area. It has a bench and a balcony. There is currently a family of moorhens that inhabit the village pond. Osgodby used to have a village shop, near the Barlby junction, but this is now a residential property The hamlet of Osgodby Common lies due north at . History The toponym is from an Old Norse personal name ''Asgaut'', with the Old Danish suffix ''-by'' ("farm" or "village"), thus "Asgaut's farm". The place is mentioned in the Domesday Book. In the Middle Ages the village was in the Ouse and Derwent wapentake of th ...
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Thirkleby High And Low With Osgodby
Thirkleby High and Low with Osgodby is a civil parish in the Hambleton district of North Yorkshire, England. The constituents of the parish consist of the villages of Great Thirkleby, Little Thirkleby and the scattered hamlet of Osgodby. The similarly named medieval settlement of Thirkleby Manor is in the parish of Kirby Grindalythe, Ryedale district. The population of the civil parish taken at the 2011 Census was 266. History The ''Domesday Book'' mentions the village of Thirkleby as ''Turchilebi'' in the ''Yarlestre hundred'' and belonging to the ''Coxwold'' manor. There were 54 villagers with the land consisting of ploughed fields and woodland. At the time of the Norman invasion, the lands belonged to ''Kofse'' but soon afterwards were granted to ''Hugh, son of Baldric''. Soon after, the manor was in the hands of the ''Mowbray'' family and followed the descent of the manor of Thirsk until the 16th century. A mesne lordship was held in the parish by ''Robert de Buscy'' in t ...
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