Nunnington is a small village and civil parish in the Ryedale district of North Yorkshire, England. The River Rye runs through the village. The population of the village (including Stonegrave) taken at the 2011 census was 361.
Nunnington Hall is a Grade I listed mansion owned by the National Trust and open to the public. The village has 28 other houses and other objects listed Grade II, including an early 18th-century bridge over the river.
Nunnington railway station lay 1 mile (1.6 km) west of the village. It closed to passengers in 1953.
The parish church, dedicated to All Saints and St James, is a Grade I listed building. The nave and chancel date from the late 13th century and the tower from 1672, but the tower, porch and vestry were rebuilt in 1883–84. There is a fine 17th-century pulpit.
A tomb in the church is said to belong to a man named Peter Loschy, who slew a dragon in Loschy Wood. In fact, the tomb belongs to Sir Walter de Teyes of Stonegrave Manor.
Former residents of Nunnington have included the writers Annie Keary (1825–1879) and Eliza Harriett Keary (1827–1918) in the 1840s, while their father William Keary (died 1859) was rector. Annie Keary's children's book Mia and Charlie; or a Week's Holiday at Ryedale Rectory (London/Winchester, 1855) recounts the story of the Proud Lady of Nunningham, who haunts the hall.
Sir Herbert Read, the anarchist poet and critic, was born at nearby Muscoates in 1893 and lived at Muscoates Grange Farm.
All Saints' and St. James' Church
Nunnington Hall
Looking to the River Rye from West Ness
Nunnington Bridge