Monks Risborough

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Monks Risborough
Monks Risborough (Buckinghamshire)
Monks Risborough

Monks Risborough shown within Buckinghamshire
OS grid reference SP8004
Parish Monks Risborough
District Wycombe
Shire county Buckinghamshire
Region South East
Constituent country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town PRINCES RISBOROUGH
Postcode district HP27
Dialling code 01844
Police Thames Valley
Fire Buckinghamshire
Ambulance South Central
European Parliament South East England
UK Parliament Aylesbury
List of places: UKEnglandBuckinghamshire

Coordinates: 51°44′04″N 0°49′47″W / 51.734462, -0.829831

Monks Risborough is a village in Buckinghamshire, England adjacent to the town of Princes Risborough.

At the time of the Domesday Book in 1086 there was no distinction between the two Risboroughs, as the parish wasn't divided until the 14th century. The name in 1086 was recorded as Riseberge though in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle it was Hrisanbyrge: both early and late Anglo Saxon names meaning Hill where brushwood grows.

The Risborough estate has always been royal hunting land, right from the time that it was mentioned as such in the Saxon Chronicle in 903 through to the time of King Henry VIII of England. However in the middle of this hunting land was a monastery established by Æschwyn, Bishop of Dorchester and given to the Benedictine monks of Christchurch, Canterbury. It is from this monastery that the modern village gets its name, and the parish church of St Dunstan's is still part of the probate jurisdiction of Canterbury.

The farming lands in the parish of Monks Risborough are fairly extensive, and include the hamlets of Askett, Cadsden, Meadle, Owlswick and Whiteleaf. The latter, which forms the highest point of the parish, features a chalk cross carved into the side of the hill that can be seen for miles around, and dates from the foundation of the old monastery.

Monks Risborough railway station opened on 11 November 1929.