Embleton, County Durham

Embleton is a hamlet, township and former chapelry, in County Durham, in England, as well as the site of a medieval village and manor.[1] It is situated 3 miles (5 km) east of Sedgefield[2] and 4 miles (6 km) west of Hartlepool. The township was historically named "Elmdene", supposedly derived from the site's proximity to a woodland of elm trees which, at an earlier time, flourished in the bordering dene. A single farmstead now occupies the site which lies adjacent to the ruins of a small church (originally a manorial chapel of ease) dedicated to the Virgin Mary.[2]

From the 13th to the mid 16th century the manor was the seat of the Elmeden family who assumed the local name.[1] The village was one of nearly 1,500 medieval villages to be abandoned in the 14th century after the collapse of the demesne system of land management.[3] It afterwards passed in the female line to the Bulmers and Smythes and in the 18th century to the Tempests of Wynyard, ancestors of the Marquesses of Londonderry.[4]

References

  1. ^ a b Mackenzie, Eneas; Ross, Marvin (1834), An historical, topographical, and descriptive view of the county palatine of Durham, Volume 1, Mackenzie and Dent, p. 441, http://books.google.ca/books?id=0ThNAAAAMAAJ 
  2. ^ a b Whellan (1856), History, topography, and directory of the county palatine of Durham, Whittaker and co., p. 520, http://books.google.ca/books?id=vN4MAAAAYAAJ 
  3. ^ Hodgett, Gerald, (2006) A Social and Economic History of Medieval Europe, Abingdon, UK: Routledge, ISBN 9780415377072, p.206.
  4. ^ Robert Surtees, History of Durham, Vol.III, p.53

Further reading