|
Date: |
|
Description: | 44669
The settlement of South Elkington is first mentioned in the Doemsday Book, at which time it was taxed with North Elkington, and the two settlements were known as 'Archintone' or 'Alchinton'. Two manors were recorded at this time. One belonged to Ivo Taillebois, and the other belonged to William de Perci, and the minimum population at this time was 62. The former landholding also included half a church and hlaf a mill, and the latter included a church, a mill, and the site of another mill. (see 44671). The Lindsey Survey of 1115 records that land was still owned by the de Perci family in Elkington. {1}
The two settlements were first mentioned separately in the twelfth century. The name means 'the farmstead, village associated with or called after Eadlac', from the Old English personal name. {2}
However, the poll tax returns of 1377 again record the two settlement together. 132 people were recorded. {3}
The Diocesan Returns of 1563 recorded 18 households in South Elkington, and by the early eighteenth century this had risen to around 22 families. {4}{5}
In 1801 the population was 158, which rose to its nineteenth century peak of 366 in 1891, and was 355 in 1901. {6}
Medieval settlement remains in the form of tofts, crofts, boundaries, ridge and furrow and enclosures have been recorded in and around the settlement. {7} | Subjects: | General Archaeology | Temporal: | 1000 - 1539 | Source: | Lincolnshire County Council | Identifier: | http://www.lincstothepast.com/Records/Re... | Go to resource |
|
|