Thornborough, Buckinghamshire

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The mediæval bridge near Thornborough, Buckinghamshire, in use from c.1400 until 1974.
The mediæval bridge near Thornborough, Buckinghamshire, in use from c.1400 until 1974.

Thornborough is a village in Buckinghamshire, England. It is located in the Aylesbury Vale, about two miles east of Buckingham.

The village name, meaning "hill where thorn trees grow", is Anglo Saxon in origin. It was recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Torneberge.

The village also has the earthworks of a roman village on its western border, in between Thornborough Bridge and the main village. There is a manor house with associated tithe barns in the centre of the village next to the pond. The village church is one of very few in Britain to have steel bells. The village pub, (The Two Brewers) is a thatched building with two bars. A second pub (The Lone Tree) on the outskirts of the village closed for refurbishment in 2004 and recently reopened as a biker pub. To the north of the village is the remains of an old windmill and on the River Ouse are the buildings of what used to be a working watermill. The disused Buckingham Arm of the Grand Union Canal runs between Buckingham and Western Milton Keynes to the north of Thornborough.