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Allowenshay

Kingstone
Old Toll House, Kingstone - geograph.org.uk - 157135.jpg
Old Toll House
Wake Hill, Kingstone - geograph.org.uk - 157132.jpg
Wake Hill
Kingstone is located in Somerset
Kingstone
Kingstone
Kingstone shown within Somerset
Population 83 (2011)
OS grid reference ST375135
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town ILMINSTER
Postcode district TA19 0
Dialling code 01460
Police Avon and Somerset
Fire Devon and Somerset
Ambulance South Western
EU Parliament South West England
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Somerset
50°55′03″N 2°53′25″W / 50.9175°N 2.8904°W / 50.9175; -2.8904Coordinates: 50°55′03″N 2°53′25″W / 50.9175°N 2.8904°W / 50.9175; -2.8904

Kingstone is a village and civil parish in Somerset, England, situated near Ilminster, 5 miles (8.0 km) north east of Chard in the South Somerset district. The village has a population of 83.

The parish includes the village of Allowenshay which was the name of the parish from 1280.

The village name means Kings settlement, which it was until King Edmund gave the manor to St Dunstan, as abbot of Glastonbury Abbey in 940. The estate was valued at this time at eight hides. After the Norman Conquest it was lost to the Count of Mortain, William the Conquerors brother Robert. It was later held by the Arundell family (1461-1663) and then by the Pouletts of Hinton St George until the 20th century. In the medieval period it was the site of a deer park.

The settlement at Allowenshay, is mentioned in 1280 as Alwynesheye derived from the Saxon personal name Alwine. After 1300 Allowenshay became the largest settlement and was the name of the local manor. Archaeology from this time reveal a chapel, though a manor house is yet to be found. However, just north of Allowenshay, fields called the Park, Lower, Higher, and Middle Park, surrounded by the remains of a bank and ditch may indicate the remains of a park by John de Burgh circa 1260.


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