Raithby cum Maltby est une paroisse civile du Lincolnshire, en Angleterre.
Location
4 m
Raithby cum Maltby is a civil parish in the East Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England. It is situated about 1 mile south-west from the market town of Louth The parish comprises the hamlets of Raithby and Maltby, and is situated in the Lincolnshire Wolds, an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
The Grade II listed parish church at Raithby is dedicated to St Peter and dates from the late 13th century, although it was rebuilt in rendered brick in 1839 by W. A. Nicholson, paid for by Revd Henry Chaplin. It includes a late-13th-century north arcade, a 15th-century font, and some 16th-century imported glass. The chancel was restored in 1883 by C. H. Fowler.
409 m
Maltby Preceptory was a house of the Knights Hospitaller in the village of Maltby, Lincolnshire, England. There are two differing accounts regarding its history.
It was established as a house during the reign of King Stephen around 1135-54 by Ranulf, Earl of Chester and included the church and Maltby, and land both there and in the villages of Tathwell and Rauceby. It closed at the dissolution of the Monasteries around 1540.
The Monastica Anglicanum claims it was a house of the Knights Templar and passed into the hands of the Hospitallers after the Templars were suppressed in 1312.
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Maltby is a hamlet in the East Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England. It forms part of Raithby cum Maltby civil parish, and is situated on the A153, 3 miles south-west from Louth. It is in the civil parish of Tathwell.
The Knights Templars had a preceptory here, later owned by the Knights Hospitallers.
761 m
Hallington railway station was a station in Hallington, Lincolnshire.
1.1 km
Hallington is a small village and civil parish in the East Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England. It is situated 2 miles south-west from the town of Louth in the Lincolnshire Wolds, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. In 2021 the parish had a population of 42.
Hallington is listed in the 1086 Domesday Book as "Halintun", with 25 households, 10 acres of meadow, and assigned to Earl Hugh of Chester.
The village is probably the site of a medieval settlement, indicated by aerial observations showing earthwork evidence of ridge and furrow fields, crofts, buildings and sunken lanes.
The parish church, which was dedicated to Saint Lawrence, no longer exists. Three isolated graves are all that remain of church and burial ground.
Hallington railway station was sited in the village; it opened in 1876 and closed in 1956. The main building still exists and is now a private residence.
Off Station Road is Home Farm House, a Grade II listed farmhouse c.1800.
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