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History information for Hoggeston and places above it in the hierarchy

Hoggeston

Hoggeston was described in 1806 in "Magna Britannia" as follows:

HOGGESTON, in the hundred of Cotslow and the deanery of Muresley, lies about three miles and a half to the south-east of Winslow. It had formerly a market on Fridays, granted in 1314 to William de Bermingham, together with a fair on the festival of the exaltation of the holy cross, commonly called Holyrood-day: both the market and the fair have long been discontinued. The manor was successively in the families of Paganel, Somery, and Bermingham; from the latter it passed by marriage, about the year 1520, to the Bulstrodes, who, about 1546, sold it to the Dormers: it is now the property of Earl Stanhope.

In the parish church are some memorials of the family of Mayne, and the tomb of the founder, of whom there is an effigy, much mutilated, holding in his hand a church. It is supposed to have been intended for William de Bermingham, lord of the manor, who died in 1342. The advowson of the rectory was annexed to the manor till the year 1798, when Lord Stanhope sold it to Worcester College in Oxford.

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