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Nether Wallop

Village and parish in Hampshire, England

Nether Wallop

Village and parish in Hampshire, England

FieldValue
countryEngland
coordinates
official_nameNether Wallop
population802
population_ref(2021 census)
civil_parishNether Wallop
shire_districtTest Valley
shire_countyHampshire
regionSouth East England
constituency_westminsterRomsey and Southampton North
post_townStockbridge
postcode_districtSO20
postcode_areaSO
dial_code01264
os_grid_referenceSU300366
websiteThe Wallops
static_image_nameNether Wallop - Country Cottage - geograph.org.uk - 1801379.jpg
static_image_captionThatched cottage

Nether Wallop is a village and civil parish in the Test Valley district of Hampshire, England, 3.5 miles northwest of Stockbridge, and 7 miles southwest of Andover.

Nether Wallop is the easternmost of the three villages collectively known as The Wallops, the other two being Over Wallop and Middle Wallop. The name "Wallop" derives from the Old English words waella and hop, which taken together roughly mean "the valley of springing water".

The village was the site of the Battle of Guoloph that took place around 440 CE. The element "Wallop" is first attested in the Domesday Book of 1086 as "Wallope", while Nether Wallop is first attested as "Wollop inferior" in Episcopal Registers .

Nether Wallop contains many old thatched cottages, and has been featured in books and TV programmes as one of the prettiest villages in England. In particular, Dane Cottage in Five Bells Lane was used as Miss Marple's home in the village of St. Mary Mead for the BBC TV adaptations of the Agatha Christie novels. The house and many of the surrounding lanes within the village were used as the setting and are commonly seen throughout many of the Miss Marple films.

Sir Richard Reade (1511–1575), Lord Chancellor of Ireland, was a native of Nether Wallop, where his family were Lords of the Manor for several generations.

British Olympic skater and Hollywood movie star Belita (Belita Gladys Lyne Jepson-Turner) as born at Garlogs in Nether Wallop in 1923.

The conductor Leopold Stokowski died at his home in Nether Wallop on 13 September 1977.

St Andrews Church, Nether Wallop, Hampshire

The church of St Andrew is partly Anglo-Saxon, and fragments of frescoes dating to that period have been discovered. It was designated as a grade I listed building in 1957.

Demographics

CensusPopulationFemaleMaleHouseholdsSource200120112021
829449380332
876464412354
802416386345

References

References

  1. Eilert Ekwall, ''Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-names'', p.493.
  2. "Dorothy Beresford 'Nether Wallop in Hampshire' 1973".
  3. [https://books.google.com/books?id=xO6FyEgYfpkC&dq=%22Early+medieval%22+Irish+%22wall+painting%22&pg=PA134 Richard Gem and Pamela Tudor-Craig in ''Anglo-Saxon England'']
  4. {{National Heritage List for England
  5. "Key Statistics". Office for National Statistics.
  6. "Key Statistics". Office for National Statistics.
  7. "Parish Profiles". Office for National Statistics.
Info: Wikipedia Source

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