Ingleby Greenhow
Ingleby Greenhow | |
Ingleby Greenhow |
|
Population | 370 (2011)[1] |
---|---|
OS grid reference | NZ581063 |
Civil parish | Ingleby Greenhow |
District | Hambleton |
Shire county | North Yorkshire |
Region | Yorkshire and the Humber |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | MIDDLESBROUGH |
Postcode district | TS9 |
Police | North Yorkshire |
Fire | North Yorkshire |
Ambulance | Yorkshire |
EU Parliament | Yorkshire and the Humber |
Coordinates: 54°26′58″N 1°06′16″W / 54.449310°N 1.104580°W
Ingleby Greenhow is a village and civil parish in the Hambleton district of North Yorkshire, England. It is on the border of the North York Moors and 3 miles south of Great Ayton.
The parish of Ingleby Greenhow has records of a John Thomasson de Grenehow, a member of the clergy, who in 1376 "had to appear before a Commission appointed to be tried with several others for either poaching or cutting down timber, or destroying property belonging to Peter de Malo Luca the 6th, of Mulgrave Castle".
The name may derive from the Saxon for Englishman's green hill. How, derived from the Old Norse word haugr, means hill or mound.[2]
The parish church, St Andrew, was almost entirely rebuilt in 1741, but has an early Norman chancel arch inside.[3]
References
- ↑ "Parish population 2011". Retrieved 28 July 2015.
- ↑ Yorkshire Place-Name Meanings
- ↑ Nikolaus Pevsner. The Buildings of England: Yorkshire, The North Riding (1966 ed.). Penguin Books. pp. 201–203.
External links
Media related to Ingleby Greenhow at Wikimedia Commons