Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Teigh

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Area
  
2.01 sq mi (5.2 km)

OS grid reference
  
SK903162

Ceremonial county
  
Rutland

Local time
  
Tuesday 9:31 AM

Dialling code
  
01572

UK parliament constituency
  
Rutland and Melton

Population
  
48 2001 Census

Unitary authority
  
Rutland

Region
  
East Midlands

Shire county
  
Rutland

Post town
  
Oakham

Teigh

Weather
  
6°C, Wind SE at 11 km/h, 98% Humidity

Teigh is a village and civil parish in the county of Rutland in the East Midlands of England. The population of the village was 48 in the 2001 census. At the 2011 census the population remained less than 100 and is included in the civil parish of Market Overton. It is notable for its parish church, almost unaltered since a 1782 rebuild, that features pews that face one another rather than the altar.

Map of Teigh, Oakham, UK

The writer Arthur Mee proposed Teigh as one of the few Thankful Villages which lost no men in World War I.

Richard Folville, a member of the gang of robbers led by his older brother Eustace was rector here from 1321. In 1340 41 he was besieged in the church and then summarily executed outside.

Anthony Jenkinson, main trader of the Muscovy Company was buried here in 1611. He had travelled as far as Bukhara when trying to reach Cathay overland from Moscow, and established overland trade routes through Russia to Persia.

In 1940, the vicar of Teigh, Rev. Henry Stanley Tibbs, was interned under Defence Regulation 18B for alleged pro-Nazi sympathies, but soon released after it was determined he was harmless.

References

Teigh Wikipedia