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Does anyone come from, or know anything about....?

Kibworth Harcourt? (In Leicestershire, England)

What can you tell me about it? :)

Update:

Just to give some more info...I have been there. I actually stay there every time I go to England, and am planning to move there. I am just hoping to learn more about the area. :)

3 Answers

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  • 1 decade ago
    Favourite answer

    Kibworth Harcourt and Kibworth Beauchamp are two villages in Leicestershire, south east of Leicester. The villages make up a single urban area and are often considered as one. They are split by the A6.

    Kibworth has many shops and a post office, over the last 5 years many new shops have appeared including a new branch of Co-op UK. There have also been many new houses built on the edge of the village and plans for 610 more to be built by 2012. The local Cricket club won the National Club Cricket Championship in 2004.

    Kibworth is close to Foxton Locks, Market Harborough, and Leicester.

    Kibworth Harcourt and Beauchamp are separate civil parishes. Beauchamp is the larger, with 3,798 people (2001 census), compared to Harcourt's 990.

    External links

    Kibworth Cricket Club

    St. Wilfrid's (Anglican) Church

    Coordinates: 52°32′N, 0°59′W

    Leicestershire was one of the most regularly shaped shires, with Leicester itself almost exactly in the middle, on the river Soar. The western boundary with Warwickshire ran along the line of Watling Street, the north-west between Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire was the angle formed by the Soar joining the Trent, and the southern border with Northamptonshire followed the rivers Avon and Welland.

    Leicester was not far from the intersection of two great Roman roads, Watling Street and the Fosse Way. It became an important town of some 2, 000-3, 000 people, Ratae Corieltavorum, the tribal capital of the Coritani. In the course of the 6th cent. the area was occupied by Anglo-Saxon settlers and became part of the kingdom of Mercia in the 7th cent., under the episcopal jurisdiction of Lichfield. Leicester became one of the five boroughs when the Danes overran the region in the late 9th cent., and though it was reconquered by Æthelfleda on behalf of Mercia in 918, Danish influence remained substantial. The shire was divided into wapentakes rather than hundreds, and many of the place-names—Ingarsby, Scraptoft, and Barkby Thorpe—are of Scandinavian origin.

    Throughout the medieval period, Leicester remained an important town, granted a charter during John's reign. The de Montfort family in the 13th cent. took its earldom from the shire. Wyclif, the morning star of the Reformation, was vicar of Lutterworth in the later 14th cent. Parliament met at Leicester in 1414 and 1426 and it was to Leicester that Richard III summoned his troops in August 1485 before marching out to fight his last battle at Bosworth.

    The north-west of the shire around Charnwood Forest was still heavily wooded, but the open country to the east of the Soar was ideal for rearing sheep. Local wool became the basis of a flourishing textile industry, and though the county was rather thinly populated, Loughborough, Melton Mowbray, Market Harborough, Hinckley, and Ashby de la Zouch developed as small market towns. Camden, in Elizabeth's reign, described Leicestershire as ‘champain country, rich in corn and grain’. Defoe visited the shire in the 1720s and thought the sheep the best in England for wool, and commented that ‘the whole county seems to be taken up in country business’. But the character of parts of the county began to change in the later 18th cent. Attempts to overcome the liability that the main river, the Soar, was not navigable had been made since the early 17th cent. But improvements in turnpike roads, canals, and then railways fastened the shire into a national network of communications. The dramatic reduction in the cost of conveying coal led to the opening of a number of pits in the north-west.

    The growth of industry and population in this period was extraordinary. The domestic system of textiles production gave way rapidly to a factory system. Leicester itself, some 17, 000 in 1801, was 60, 000 by 1861, and 211, 000 by 1901: it continues to dominate the shire, with nearly half the population in 1951. Coalville was an almost overnight growth. In 1801 it was not in existence. The opening of the Whitwick colliery in 1824 led to 1, 200 people by 1846, 15, 000 by 1901, and 25, 000 by 1951. Hinckley and Loughborough also grew rapidly. By the local government reorganization of 1972 Leicestershire took over the neighbouring county of Rutland, but it was restored in 1995.

  • ?
    Lv 7
    1 decade ago

    It and Beauchamp are considered as 1, bisected by the A6.

    For more history go to www.ask.com/Kibworth Harcourt

  • 1 decade ago

    nope never been...sorry

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