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Ullesthorpe

Ullesthorpe
Ullesthorpe village sign - geograph.org.uk - 626039.jpg
Ullesthorpe village sign
Ullesthorpe is located in Leicestershire
Ullesthorpe
Ullesthorpe
Ullesthorpe shown within Leicestershire
Population 903 (2011 Census)
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town Market Harborough
Postcode district LE17
Police Leicestershire
Fire Leicestershire
Ambulance East Midlands
EU Parliament East Midlands
List of places
UK
England
Leicestershire
52°29′06″N 1°15′18″W / 52.485°N 1.255°W / 52.485; -1.255Coordinates: 52°29′06″N 1°15′18″W / 52.485°N 1.255°W / 52.485; -1.255

Ullesthorpe is a small village and civil parish situated in the Harborough District in southern Leicestershire. Located 10 miles north of Rugby, Ullesthorpe is within easy access of the M1, M69 and M6. Ullesthorpe is noted for its historic background with a mill, disused railway station and traces of a medieval settlement evident on the edge of the village. Celebrity Lenny Henry once lived in Ullesthorpe.

Local amenities include a Lenny Henry statue, a primary school, post office, village shop, butchers, doctors surgery, hairdressers, garden centre, congregational church, two pubs and a golf course associated with the 'Ullesthorpe Court Hotel'.

Many prehistoric items have been located in and around Ullesthorpe, this includes flint tools found by the Lutterworth Archaeological Fieldwork Group. This indicates a settlement was located here during the prehistoric period. There is significant evidence that Romans came to Ullesthorpe in the 1st Century AD because Roman coins, roof tiles and pottery have been recovered, as well as nearby Roman roads.

After the fall of the Romans, settlers from the continent and Scandinavia began to move to Ullesthorpe. At certain times, the Saxons controlled the local area. However, a major influence came from the Danes. The name 'Ullesthorpe' derives from Old Scandinavian which means "the settlement of a man called Ulfr". Other villages near Ullesthorpe were also highly influenced by the Danes and therefore their names are derived from the Scandinavian language as well.

In 1870-1872- John Marius Wilson's described Ullesthorpe as: "A hamlet in Claybrooke parish, Leicester; on the Rugby and Leicester railway, 3¼ miles NW of Lutterworth".

Until the mid 19th century, Ullesthorpe was a minor settlement within the Ancient Parish of Claybrook. Other villages included Claybrooke Magna, Claybrooke Parva, and Wibtoft. These 4 villages formed the parish of St Peter's Church Claybrooke. However, deemed under the 1866 Act, many villages became their own civil parish. Although Ullesthorpe is still part of St Peter's Parish Church, Ullesthorpe now has its own civil parish where people are elected into Ullesthorpe Parish Council who form a local government unit and control finances within the local village.


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