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Princethorpe

Village in Warwickshire, England


Summary

Village in Warwickshire, England

FieldValue
countryEngland
official_namePrincethorpe
coordinates
civil_parishPrincethorpe
population429
population_ref(2021)
shire_districtRugby
shire_countyWarwickshire
regionWest Midlands
constituency_westminsterKenilworth and Southam
post_townRUGBY
postcode_districtCV23
postcode_areaCV
dial_code01926
os_grid_referenceSP4068
static_image_namePrincethorpe-Hightown - geograph.org.uk - 2118648.jpg
static_image_captionBuildings in Princethorpe

Princethorpe is a village and civil parish in the Rugby district of Warwickshire, England. In the 2011 census the parish had a population 376, increasing to 429 at the 2021 census.

Princethorpe is located roughly halfway between the towns of Rugby 6.5 mi to the north-east, and Leamington Spa 6 mi to the south-west. It is at the centre of a busy junction between the A423 (Coventry to Banbury), B4453 (Rugby to Leamington) and B4455 (Fosse Way) roads. The village once had a pub called the Three Horseshoes, which was in business continuously from at least 1816 until it closed in 2023. Situated on Leamington Road in the village is Our Lady's Primary School. It is a primary school with around 100 children between the ages of 4 and 11.

Just outside the village is Princethorpe College, a Roman Catholic school. The school incorporates the buildings of the former St. Mary's Priory, which was founded by French Benedictine nuns from Montargis who sought asylum from the French Revolution in 1792. After several moves, they settled in Princethorpe in 1832, and established a priory and school. In 1966 it was purchased by the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart who established it into its present form.

The village has a history extending to at least the Roman period, related to the fact that the Fosse Way, an old Roman road ran through it. Two Roman settlements existed just south of the current village. In the 1950s, a number of Roman coins were found in Princethorpe.

Its name likely derived from an Anglo-Saxon farmer called Pren. It was first mentioned in 1275–6. In the reign of Henry VI it came into the possession of the Hugford family of Emscote and stayed in that family until the reign of Henry VII when John Hugford sold it to Sir William Compton. Princethorpe was originally in the parish of Wolston but was made, for convenience, a separate parish with Stretton by an Act of Parliament in 1694 the reign of William III. Princethorpe is today still part of the ecclesiastical parish of Stretton-on-Dunsmore, but became a separate civil parish in 1866. File:Princethorpe College, Princethorpe, Warwickshire-geograph-3501703-by-Ian-Rob.jpg|Princethorpe College File:The Three Horseshoes, Princethorpe - geograph.org.uk - 3742298.jpg|The Three Horseshoes, Princethorpe

Notable people

Land-drainage reformer Joseph Elkington developed his drainage techniques while farming at Princethorpe.

References

References

  1. "PRINCETHORPE Parish in West Midlands". City Population.
  2. "The Three Horseshoes at Princethorpe". Our Warwickshire.
  3. "Princethorpe College: Origins". Our Warwickshire.
  4. "Princethorpe College: The Priory". Our Warwickshire.
  5. "Site of Roman settlement 200m s of Princethorpe". Our Warwickshire.
  6. "Site of Roman settlement 400m s of Priory Farm, Princethorpe.". Our Warwickshire.
  7. (2000). "The Warwickshire Village Book". Countryside Books.
  8. "Parishes: Stretton-upon-Dunsmore and Princethorpe". British History Online.
  9. "Stretton-on-Dunsmore Warwickshire Family History Guide". Parishmouse Warwickshire.
  10. "Princethorpe Tn/CP - Relationships and changes". Vision of Britain.
  11. Upton, Chris. (2013-02-15). "Farm engineer Joseph Elkington was an expert in his field". [[Birmingham Post]].
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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