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Abbots Leigh

Abbots Leigh
Stone building with prominent three stage square tower. In the foreground is a grass area and road separated from the church by a stone wall.
Holy Trinity parish church
The Priory, Abbots Leigh - geograph.org.uk - 1051708.jpg
The Priory
Abbots Leigh is located in Somerset
Abbots Leigh
Abbots Leigh
Abbots Leigh shown within Somerset
Population 799 (2011)
OS grid reference ST545735
Civil parish
  • Abbot's Leigh
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town Bristol
Postcode district BS8
Dialling code 01275
Police Avon and Somerset
Fire Avon
Ambulance South Western
EU Parliament South West England
UK Parliament
Website Abbots Leigh web site
List of places
UK
England
Somerset
51°27′39″N 2°39′23″W / 51.4607°N 2.6564°W / 51.4607; -2.6564Coordinates: 51°27′39″N 2°39′23″W / 51.4607°N 2.6564°W / 51.4607; -2.6564

Abbots Leigh is a village and civil parish in Somerset, England, about 3 miles (4.8 km) west of the centre of Bristol.

The original Middle English name was Lega and the village became Abbots Leigh in the mid-12th century when Robert Fitzharding (first Earl of Berkeley), who purchased the manor having been rewarded as Lord of the Manor of Portbury by the king, He also purchased Bedminster, Hareclive and Billeswick manors. He went on to found the Abbey of St Augustine at what was Billeswick and bequeathed the income from the parish to support the Abbey Because of this connection to the abbey, when the Diocese of Bristol was carved out of the Bath and Wells, Gloucester and Worcester diocesan territories (Patent Roll, Henry V111, Art. 9, June 1542 ) the boundary to the diocese was drawn around the parish, including the Saxon 'enclosure' at Hamgreen which had been part of Portbury manor lands up to this time. All the surrounding parishes in Somerset are in Bath and Wells diocese. The Parish Map shows this very extended historic boundary which puts St Katherine's School and Chapel Pill Farm both indisputably within the parish and not in Pill as everyone would think!

The parish of Abbots Leigh was part of the Portbury Hundred.

The manor house here, also named Abbot's Leigh or Leigh Court, was a resting place of Charles II during his escape to France in 1651. He arrived on the evening of 12 September, staying at the home of Mr and Mrs George Norton, who were friends of the Kings's travelling companion, Jane Lane. The Nortons were unaware of the King's identity during his three-day stay.


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Wikipedia

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