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Buckland Dinham

Buckland Dinham
St. Michael and All Angels, Buckland Dinham - geograph.org.uk - 128720.jpg
St. Michael and All Angels
Street scene showing gray stone houses on the left of a road with a few cars.
Buckland Dinham
Buckland Dinham is located in Somerset
Buckland Dinham
Buckland Dinham
Buckland Dinham shown within Somerset
Population 381 (2011)
OS grid reference ST755515
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town FROME
Postcode district BA11 0
Dialling code 01373
Police Avon and Somerset
Fire Devon and Somerset
Ambulance South Western
EU Parliament South West England
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Somerset
51°15′43″N 2°21′01″W / 51.2620°N 2.3504°W / 51.2620; -2.3504Coordinates: 51°15′43″N 2°21′01″W / 51.2620°N 2.3504°W / 51.2620; -2.3504

Buckland Dinham is a small village near Frome in Somerset, England. The village has a population of 381. The village's main industry is farming (arable and dairy), but the village is also a dormitory village for the nearby cities of Bath and Bristol.

The village used to be known as Buckland Denham. Denham is believed to be a family name (there are many other villages with Denham in their name) whilst Buckland may refer to a former deer population. Although Buckland Dinham itself does not have a manor house, it is close to Orchardleigh Estate.

There are signs of prehistoric archaeology. A hand axe has been found in Lower Street (which follows the spring line). Kingsdown Camp is an Iron Age hill fort. It is a Scheduled Ancient Monument. It is a univallate fort with an area of 0.15 hectares (0.37 acres), and is approximately quadrilateral in shape. In the Iron Age or Roman period a drystone wall was constructed, possibly 4 metres (13 ft) high and 2.5 metres (8 ft) wide. There is an entrance on the northeast side. The fort continued to be used by the Romans.

The parish of Buckland Denham was part of the Kilmersdon Hundred,

The Dorset and Somerset Canal's branch to the Somerset coalfields would have passed via the bottom end of the Buckland vale, had it ever been completed. It is now just off the route of NCR 24, the Colliers Way. The Murtry Aqueduct remains.Fussell's balance locks were built on the side of Barrow Hill, an extension of the hill on which Buckland Dinham is perched.


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