Beadlam is a village and civil parish in North Yorkshire, England. According to the 2001 census it had a population of 250, reducing to 229 at the Census 2011. It is situated about 10 miles (16 km) west of Pickering, near the southern boundary of the North York Moors National Park. Beadlam is halfway between Helmsley and Kirkbymoorside on the A170.

The name Beadlam derives from the plural form of the Old English bōðl meaning 'a dwelling'. The village is unusual in that it is directly joined onto another village, Nawton, and is commonly given the name Nawton Beadlam. The village has a secondary school Ryedale School and Nawton, the village it is attached to, has a primary school, Nawton Primary School. The village has a fish and chip shop, which is popular with the students returning from Ryedale School, and a bus stop operated by the East Yorkshire bus service which provides connections to most of North Yorkshire including major cities and coastal towns in the area including York, Scarborough and Bridlington.

Beadlam was historically a township in the ancient parish of Kirkdale. It became a separate civil parish in 1866, but remains part of the ecclesiastical parish of Kirkdale. St Gregory's Minster, the parish church in Kirkdale, has been in use since before the Norman Conquest. Its daughter church, St Hilda's Church, Beadlam, was built in 1882–3. It serves as the church of a local Ecumenical Partnership between Methodists and Anglicans. Between 1974 and 2023 the village was part of the Ryedale district. It is now administered by the unitary North Yorkshire Council. Two miles (3.2 km) west of the village is Beadlam Roman villa, which was excavated in 1969 revealing two 4th-century rectangular buildings, the northernmost of which was fitted with a hypocaust overlain by a tessellated floor.

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Beadlam

Beadlam est un village et une paroisse civile du Yorkshire du Nord, en Angleterre.
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205 m

Nawton (Yorkshire du Nord)

Nawton est un village et une paroisse civile du Yorkshire du Nord, en Angleterre.
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1.7 km

Wombleton

Wombleton est un village et une paroisse civile du Yorkshire du Nord, en Angleterre.
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2.0 km

Pockley

Pockley est un village et une paroisse civile du Yorkshire du Nord, en Angleterre.
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2.6 km

Église Saint-Grégoire de Kirkdale

L'église Saint-Grégoire de Kirkdale (St Gregory's Minster en anglais) est une église paroissiale anglicane située dans le Kirkdale, une vallée du Yorkshire du Nord, en Angleterre. La nef de l'église remonte au milieu du XIe siècle. Le cadran solaire de Kirkdale, qui se trouve encore au-dessus de l'entrée, sous le porche, comprend une inscription en vieil anglais qui note que la reconstruction de l'église a été financée par un certain Orm, fils de Gamal, à l'époque du comte Tostig de Northumbrie (entre 1055 et 1065). Le reste du bâtiment remonte au XIIIe siècle, sauf le porche et la tour, construits au XIXe siècle, et le chancel, reconstruit au même moment. Elle a été restaurée entre 1907 et 1909 par l'architecte Temple Moore (en). L'église est dédiée à Grégoire le Grand, pape de 590 à 604. Elle est protégée en tant que monument classé de grade I depuis 1955.