Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Ivinghoe

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Population
  
965 (2011 Census)

Civil parish
  
Ivinghoe

Country
  
Shire county
  
Dialling code
  
01296

OS grid reference
  
SP946162

Region
  
Sovereign state
  
District
  
Aylesbury Vale

UK parliament constituency
  
Ivinghoe Ivinghoe Hills butterfly walk National Trust

Weather
  
2°C, Wind W at 10 km/h, 88% Humidity

Ivinghoe at risk help


Ivinghoe is a village and civil parish within Aylesbury Vale district in Buckinghamshire, England, close to the border with Hertfordshire and Bedfordshire. It is four miles north of Tring and six miles south of Leighton Buzzard, close to the village of Pitstone.

Contents

Ivinghoe Pete39s Walks Kensworth to Ivinghoe part 1

Etymology

Ivinghoe Pitstone Pavilion and Football Pitches Website of Pitstone

The village name is Anglo-Saxon in origin, and means 'Ifa's hill-spur'. In the Domesday Book of 1086 it was recorded as Evinghehou. Ivinghoe is also an important point on the Icknield Way, joining the Upper Icknield and Lower Icknield together. The Icknield way is claimed to be the oldest road in Britain, and dates back centuries.

Buildings

Ivinghoe Ivinghoe Beacon and Bridgewater Monument from Aldbury

The large church dates from 1220 but was set on fire in 1234 in an act of spite against the local Bishop. The church was rebuilt in 1241.

Ivinghoe Walk pictures Ivinghoe Beacon and Bridgewater Monument

For a village Ivinghoe has an unusual feature: a town hall, rather than a village hall. The village has some fine examples of Tudor architecture, particularly around the village green.

Ivinghoe Ivinghoe Beacon and the Grand Union Out of the LOOP

Ivinghoe Beacon, near the village, is an ancient beacon, or signal point, which was used in times of crisis to send messages across the country and is now popular with walkers who just want to get exercise and see the view. It used to be used as a site for flying model aeroplanes but has been forbidden due to accidents. The hill is the site of an early Iron age hillfort which during excavations in the 1960s was identified from bronzework finds to date back to the Bronze-Iron transition period between 800-700 BC. Like many other similar hillforts in the Chilterns it is thought to have been occupied for only a short period, possibly less than one generation.

Nearby is Pitstone Windmill, owned by the National Trust.

Film location

Ivinghoe Ivinghoe Wikipedia

Scenes for feature films, such as Quatermass 2, Batman Begins and The Dirty Dozen have been shot at Ivinghoe Beacon. Ivinghoe village, meanwhile, once served as a set for the children's TV series ChuckleVision.

Hamlets

Ivinghoe Ivinghoe Beacon Hillfort The Modern Antiquariancom

Ivinghoe Aston is a hamlet within the parish of Ivinghoe. Its name refers to a farm to the east of the main village. The hamlet has four farms and some houses. There is also a public house, The Village Swan, which was bought by some of the residents in 1997. Ivinghoe Aston has close connections with the Vale of Aylesbury Hunt, and the South Hertfordshire Beagle pack. Both packs meet there and hunt nearby.

Ivinghoe BeenThereDoneThat Ivinghoe 3 Buckinghamshire

A small stream called Whistle Brook flows down through the hamlet, from the Chilterns above, to join the River Ouzel at nearby Slapton.

Another hamlet in Ivinghoe is Greatgap.

Schools

Brookmead School is a mixed, foundation primary school in Ivinghoe. It takes children from the age of four through to the age of eleven. The school has 280 pupils.

References

Ivinghoe Wikipedia


Similar Topics