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Brixworth

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"BRIXWORTH, a parish in the hundred of Orlingbury, in the county of Northampton, 6 miles to the N. of Northampton. It is a station on the Northampton, Market Harborough, and Stamford branch of the London and North-Western railway. Brixworth was once a market town, and the manor was held by the Fitz-Simons. The parish contains iron and other stone-quarries, and some of the inhabitants are employed in the lace manufacture. The living is a vicarage in the diocese of Peterborough, of the value of £300, in the patronage of the bishop.  ... More" [Transcribed from The National Gazetteer of Great Britain and Ireland 1868 by Colin Hinson ©2010]

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Churches

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Description & Travel

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Gazetteers

The National Gazetteer of Great Britain and Ireland - 1868

"BRIXWORTH, a parish in the hundred of Orlingbury, in the county of Northampton, 6 miles to the N. of Northampton. It is a station on the Northampton, Market Harborough, and Stamford branch of the London and North-Western railway. Brixworth was once a market town, and the manor was held by the Fitz-Simons. The parish contains iron and other stone-quarries, and some of the inhabitants are employed in the lace manufacture. The living is a vicarage* in the diocese of Peterborough, of the value of £300, in the patronage of the bishop. The church, dedicated to All Saints, is one of the most interesting in England, with its Saxon arches formed of Roman bricks, and exhibiting every subsequent style of architecture interposed up to the time of Henry VI. Mr. Britton concluded it to have been an Anglo-Roman building, Mr. Rickman a Norman; it appears, however, as deduced by Mr. Roberts, from the edition of his book in 1835, that he then classed it amongst the Saxon buildings of the country, though not earlier than those of Barton-on-Humber and Earl's Barton. It remained for Mr. Watkins, the present incumbent, to point out the great antiquity and real character of this building, which he found, by excavations carried on with untiring energy both within and without the church, to have been built upon the foundations of a still more ancient structure, the walls and piers of which could still be clearly defined, proving it to have been originally built for a Roman basilica; or, as Mr.

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Maps

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You can see maps centred on OS grid reference SP757702 (Lat/Lon: 52.324369, -0.890793), Brixworth which are provided by: