Thingoe was a hundred of Suffolk, consisting of 31850acres.[1]
One of the smaller hundreds of Suffolk, around 9miles wide and 11miles long, Thingoe contained the borough of Bury St Edmunds on its eastern border, though the town was considered a separate jurisdiction. The remainder of the hundred consisted of the land to the west of Bury St Edmunds. The River Lark rises in the hundred, flowing north to the River Little Ouse.
The name derives from the words thing, a Norse word meaning "assembly", and howe, again Norse, meaning detached hill or mound.[2]
Thingoe Hundred consisted of the following 18 parishes:[1] [3]
Map | Parish | Area (acres) |
---|---|---|
Barrow | 2810 | |
Brockley | 1080 | |
Chevington | 2240 | |
Flempton | 720 | |
Fornham All Saints | 2200 | |
Great Saxham | 1670 | |
Hargrave | 1870 | |
Hawstead | 1980 | |
Hengrave | 1000 | |
Horningsheath | 1780 | |
Ickworth | 1350 | |
Lackford | 2470 | |
Little Saxham | 1300 | |
Nowton | 1320 | |
Rede | 1310 | |
Risby | 2620 | |
Westley | 680 | |
Whepstead | 3450 |