Beningbrough is a village and civil parish in the county of North Yorkshire, England. The population as taken at the 2011 Census was less than 100. Details are included in the civil parish of Shipton, North Yorkshire. Beningbrough village is 6 miles (10 km) north-west from York city centre. The parish, which includes Beningbrough Hall and Park, is bordered at the south-west by the River Ouse, historically the border between the North Riding and West Riding of Yorkshire. According to the 2001 Census, parish population was 55. Beningbrough is within the ecclesiastical parish of Shipton with Overton. The parish church of Holy Evangelists is at Shipton by Beningbrough. Beningbrough is listed in the 1086 Domesday Book as "Benniburg", meaning a "stronghold associated with a man called 'Beonna'", being an Old English person name. At the time of the Norman Conquest, Beningbrough was in the Bulford Hundred of the North Riding of Yorkshire. The settlement contained five households and five villagers, with one-and-a-half ploughlands, three furlongs of woodland, and six acres of meadow. In 1066, Asfrith was lord, this transferred to Ralph in 1086, with Hugh fitzBaldric becoming tenant-in-chief to king William I. In 1870 Beningbrough was a township in the parish of Newton-on-Ouse, containing 88 people in 15 houses within an area of 1,070 acres (4.3 km2), and in 1877, 74 people in 1,092 acres (4.4 km2). From 1974 to 2023 it was part of the district of Hambleton, it is now administered by the unitary North Yorkshire Council. Beningbrough railway station was the first station out of York on the main line to Newcastle. The station opened on the GNER line in 1841; closed to passengers in 1958, and to freight in 1965. The racehorse Beningbrough, winner of the 1794 St Leger Stakes, was named after the village.

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Beningbrough

Beningbrough est un village et une paroisse civile du Yorkshire du Nord, en Angleterre.
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1.4 km

Beningbrough Hall

Beningbrough Hall est un grand manoir géorgien situé près du village de Beningbrough, dans le Yorkshire du Nord, en Angleterre, et surplombe la rivière Ouse. Il présente des intérieurs baroques, des escaliers en porte-à-faux, des sculptures sur bois et des couloirs centraux qui s'étendent sur toute la longueur de la maison. Extérieurement, la maison est un manoir géorgien en briques rouges avec une grande allée menant à la façade principale et un jardin clos. La maison abrite plus de 100 portraits prêtés par la National Portrait Gallery. Il possède un restaurant, une boutique et un magasin de jardinage et est sélectionné en 2010 pour le Guardian Family Friendly Museum Award. Le manoir est situé sur un vaste terrain et en est séparée par un exemple de ha-ha (un mur creux) pour empêcher les moutons et le bétail d'entrer dans les jardins ou dans le manoir.
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1.7 km

Nidd (rivière)

Le Nidd est une rivière dans la comté du Yorkshire du Nord. Il prend son source dans la vallée de Nidderdale sur les pentes de la montagne du Great Whernside et rejoint l’Ouse près de Nun Monkton. La vallée supérieure de la rivière, connue soud le nom de Nidderdale, a été classée « zone de beauté naturelle exceptionnelle » en 1994.
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1.9 km

Nun Monkton

Nun Monkton est un village et une paroisse civile du Yorkshire du Nord, en Angleterre.
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2.3 km

Moor Monkton

Moor Monkton est un village et une paroisse civile du Yorkshire du Nord, en Angleterre.