Duckmanton

Duckmanton is a village within the civil parish of Sutton cum Duckmanton, in North East Derbyshire, between Bolsover and Chesterfield. Duckmanton is a long scattered village, running north and south, usually designated Long, Middle and Far Duckmanton, of which Middle Duckmanton is 4 miles (6.4 km) east from Chesterfield and 2.5 miles (4.0 km) west from Bolsover.[1]

Duckmanton

Duckmanton Workshops.
Duckmanton
Location within Derbyshire
OS grid referenceSK448718
Civil parish
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townCHESTERFIELD
Postcode districtS44
Dialling code01246
PoliceDerbyshire
FireDerbyshire
AmbulanceEast Midlands
UK Parliament

In chronostratigraphy, the British sub-stage of the Carboniferous period, the 'Duckmantian' derives its name from the study of geological exposures in a railway cutting at Duckmanton.[2]

History

Duckmanton is recorded in 1086 in the Domesday Book under the land of Ralph Fitzhubert.[3]

In Duckmanton Leofnoth had four carucates of land and two bovates to the geld with land for five ploughs. There are eighteen paying tenants with five ploughs. There are eight acres of meadow and woodland pasture one league long by one league wide. TRE[4] worth about four pounds now nineteen shillings. Geoffrey holds it.[5]

gollark: Okay. Not sure what the point of bringing it up here is.
gollark: As I said, just have multiple out of game servers using Node or whatever and have a Krist-y API for ingame computers to use.
gollark: Oh, Lua libraries.
gollark: There are good libraries available, so that doesn't sound very problematic.
gollark: It is not as if everything has to be a full node in a distributed one.

References

  1. "White's 1857 Directory of Derbyshire: Sutton-cum-Duckmanton Parish". Retrieved 4 March 2014.
  2. Cleal, C.J., Thomas, B.A., 1996 British Upper Carboniferous Stratigraphy Vol 11 of the Geological Conservation Review series
  3. Ralph Fitzhubert had a number of manors in Derbyshire including Crich, Palterton, Stoney Middleton, Boulton and Ashover.
  4. Tempore Regis Edward i.e. in the time of King Edward before the Norman Conquest in 1066
  5. Domesday Book, a complete translation, Ann Williams and GH Martin (Eds), p751, ISBN 0-14-051535-6, 2002

See also



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