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Tonge, Kent

Tonge
Tonge Pond and Mill - geograph.org.uk - 6557.jpg
Tonge Pond and Mill
Tonge is located in Kent
Tonge
Tonge
Tonge shown within Kent
OS grid reference TQ9363
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town Sittingbourne
Postcode district ME9
Police Kent
Fire Kent
Ambulance South East Coast
EU Parliament South East England
List of places
UK
England
Kent
51°20′19″N 0°46′33″E / 51.3385°N 0.7758°E / 51.3385; 0.7758Coordinates: 51°20′19″N 0°46′33″E / 51.3385°N 0.7758°E / 51.3385; 0.7758

Tonge is a village near Sittingbourne in Kent, England. The hamlet is north of Bapchild (where at the 2011 Census the population was included), close to Murston Marshes beside the Swale.

It is mainly farmland with one road (Church Road and Blacketts Road) passing through it towards Blacketts Farm.

In 1798, Edward Hasted records that it was once called 'Thwang' (a saxon name).

Vortigern, King of Saxon Britain reward two saxon chiefs Hengist and Horsa after his victory over the Scots and Picts. Hengist requested, as a pledge of the king's affection, only as much land as on ox-hide could surround. This was granted, he cut the whole hide into small thongs (long, thin strips, generally of sturdy fiber or leather, typically used for binding), and inclosed within them a space of ground, this was large enough to contain a castle, which he accordingly built on it, and named it Thwang-ceastre (i. e. Thong-castle). The castle later became a ruin in the later years of the saxon age.

Some writers record it at Thong Castle, near Grimsby, in Lincolnshire, others place it at Doncaster.Leland, Richard Kilburne (Typographie, a Brief Survey of the County of Kent) and John Philipott (Visitation of the County of Kent, 1619) all record it near Sittigbourne. These events happened in 461, Bede and Gildas mention nothing of it in their writings, and Malmsbury tells it only as a report.

Only the moat, a millpond, and the outer earthworks remain. The mill pond was used by the Grade II listed Tonge Mill.

Leland also records a poor hospital called Pokeshaulle (during King Richard III of England's reign). In 1662, during Queen Mary's reign it became the hospital of St. James, of Puckleshall. It was given to Sir John Parrot.


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