Aldringham
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Aldringham is a village in the Blything Hundred of Suffolk, England. The village is located 1 mile (1½ km) south of
Leiston Leiston ( ) is an English town in the East Suffolk non-metropolitan district of Suffolk, near Saxmundham and Aldeburgh, about from the North Sea coast, north-east of Ipswich and north-east of London. The town had a population of 5,508 at th ...
and 3 miles (4½ km) northwest of
Aldeburgh Aldeburgh ( ) is a coastal town in the county of Suffolk, England. Located to the north of the River Alde. Its estimated population was 2,276 in 2019. It was home to the composer Benjamin Britten and remains the centre of the international Alde ...
close to the
North Sea The North Sea lies between Great Britain, Norway, Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands and Belgium. An epeiric sea, epeiric sea on the European continental shelf, it connects to the Atlantic Ocean through the English Channel in the south and the ...
coast. The parish includes the coastal village of
Thorpeness Thorpeness is a seaside village in the East Suffolk district of Suffolk, England, which developed in the early 20th century into an exclusive holiday village. It belongs to the parish of Aldringham cum Thorpe and lies within the Suffolk Coast ...
. The mid-2005 population estimate for
Aldringham cum Thorpe Aldringham cum Thorpe is a civil parish in the East Suffolk district of Suffolk, England. Located south of the town of Leiston, the parish includes the villages of Aldringham and Thorpeness, which is on the coast, between Sizewell (north) and ...
parish was 730.


History

Aldringham is mentioned in the
Domesday Book Domesday Book () – the Middle English spelling of "Doomsday Book" – is a manuscript record of the "Great Survey" of much of England and parts of Wales completed in 1086 by order of King William I, known as William the Conqueror. The manus ...
of 1086 as 'Alrincham'. Its placename derivation is uncertain but Ekwall indicates that it probably means "the village of Ealdhere's people": the similarity to Aldeburgh is coincidental or the result of assimilation. There is no manor at Aldringham referred to in the Domesday Survey of 1086, but there are two estates mentioned. One, included in the valuation of Leiston, was in the soc of the bishop at Hoxne, and was held as tenant by
Robert Malet Robert Malet (c. 1050 – by 1130) was a Norman-English baron and a close advisor of Henry I. Early life Malet was the son of William Malet, and inherited his father's great honour of Eye in 1071. This made him one of the dozen or so grea ...
. This included seven villeins and a bordar, having 90 acres. The other was a holding of 20 acres and half a ploughteam, and was also held by Robert Malet.


Manor of Aldringham

The manor of Aldringham, and its church (a vicarage), were in the lordship of Ranulf de Glanvill,
Chief Justiciar Justiciar is the English form of the medieval Latin term ''justiciarius'' or ''justitiarius'' ("man of justice", i.e. judge). During the Middle Ages in England, the Chief Justiciar (later known simply as the Justiciar) was roughly equivale ...
of England to Henry II, who founded the Augustinian Priory of Butley (1171) and the Premonstratensian Abbey at Leiston (c. 1183). Ranulf originally granted the churches of St Margaret at
Leiston Leiston ( ) is an English town in the East Suffolk non-metropolitan district of Suffolk, near Saxmundham and Aldeburgh, about from the North Sea coast, north-east of Ipswich and north-east of London. The town had a population of 5,508 at th ...
and St Andrew at Aldringham to Butley Priory, but it was subsequently approved by the first governors of those houses, Gilbert of Butley and Robert of Leiston, that the churches of Leiston and Aldringham be transferred to Leiston Abbey in exchange for their church of Knodishall. Ranulf's manor in Aldringham, however, remained in his family: W.A. Copinger shows a descent through a supposed son of Ranulf's, William de Glanvill, to William's son Gilbert, to Gilbert's son Sir Ralph de Glanville, and to Sir Ralph's daughter Maud. It then passed by her daughter Sarah's marriage to Sir Robert de Ufford,
Justiciar of Ireland The chief governor was the senior official in the Dublin Castle administration, which maintained English and British rule in Ireland from the 1170s to 1922. The chief governor was the viceroy of the English monarch (and later the British monarch ...
(1268-70, 1276-81), whose son Robert (1279-1316) was summoned to Parliament in 1308, and was (by Cecily de Valoines) the father of Sir Robert de Ufford, created 1st Earl of Suffolk in 1337. In this way the manor of Aldringham was attached to the seat of power of the Earls, and later the Dukes, of Suffolk. Although the last-named Robert was granted the reversion of the manor of Benhall (with its patronage of Butley Priory and Leiston Abbey) in 1337, this did not mature until the death of Eleanor Ferre in 1349, after which the 1st Earl of Suffolk busied himself with the relocation of Leiston Abbey to a new site away from those destabilizing marine inundations to which Minsmere was sometimes exposed. On the failure of the Ufford line, Aldringham manor passed to the de la Poles, and after the attainder and execution of
Edmund de la Pole, 3rd Duke of Suffolk Edmund de la Pole, 3rd Duke of Suffolk, 6th Earl of Suffolk, KG (c. 147130 April 1513), Duke of Suffolk, was a son of John de la Pole, 2nd Duke of Suffolk and his wife Elizabeth of York. Although the male York line ended with the death of Edw ...
in 1513 it reverted to the Crown.'Aldringham', in W.A. Copinger, ''The Manors of Suffolk'', II: Hundreds of Blything, Bosmere and Claydon (Taylor, Garnett, Evans, & Co., Ltd., Manchester 1908)
p. 4
(Internet Archive).
During the early 17th century, King
James I James I may refer to: People *James I of Aragon (1208–1276) *James I of Sicily or James II of Aragon (1267–1327) *James I, Count of La Marche (1319–1362), Count of Ponthieu *James I, Count of Urgell (1321–1347) *James I of Cyprus (1334–13 ...
granted the rectory of Aldringham (including the neighbouring chapelry of Thorpe), with its tithes, to George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham, who sold it in 1626; in 1640 it was again sold to Daniel Eliab and Matthew Harvey, and to their heirs forever, which heirs were still holding in the early 1700s. In 1792 both the rectory with its tithes, and also the manor, were in the hands of Sir Joshua Vanneck, 3rd Bart., afterwards 1st Baron Huntingfield.


Antiquities

Brabner's ''Comprehensive Gazetteer'' of 1895 states that Aldringham was formerly a market town, and that it "still" had a pleasure-fair on 11 December. This alludes to the "Coldfair" after which Coldfair Green is named. The oldest secular building in the village is ''The Parrot and Punchbowl'' pub, which contains many references to its heavy involvement in smuggling in the two centuries after its opening in the sixteenth century.Nigel Smith and Tony Green. 'Aldringham Parrot & Punchbowl', ''Suffolk Real Ale Guide'' (Ipswich: CAMRA, 2005)
Retrieved 30 August 2008.
Aldringham Windmill was dismantled in 1922 and re-erected in 1923 at
Thorpeness Thorpeness is a seaside village in the East Suffolk district of Suffolk, England, which developed in the early 20th century into an exclusive holiday village. It belongs to the parish of Aldringham cum Thorpe and lies within the Suffolk Coast ...
. Aldringham was the home of the poet, artist and architect Cecil Lay, and most of his architectural work is found in or near the village, including Raidsend, some houses on North Warren, and the Providence Baptist Chapel on Aldringham Heath.


Community

The village is dispersed and close to both Leiston and Aldeburgh so has few basic services and community facilities. The village expanded with the construction of a small housing estate in the early 2000s. The grade II listed Parrot and Punchbowl pub is situated in Aldringham and dates back to the late 1500s.


Notable residents

* R. J. Unstead; historian and author *
Michael Walker, Baron Walker of Aldringham Field Marshal Michael John Dawson Walker, Baron Walker of Aldringham, (born 7 July 1944) is a retired British Army officer. Commissioned in 1966, he served in Cyprus, Northern Ireland, and in a variety of staff posts in the United Kingdom unti ...
; retired Field Marshal


References


External links

* * {{authority control Villages in Suffolk