Ash-cum-Ridley is a civil parish in the Sevenoaks district of Kent , England . According to the 2001 census the parish had a population of 7,070, reducing to 6,641 at the 2011 Census.
5-465: The parish includes four main settlements: New Street is another hamlet, east of Ridley and north of Hodsoll Street; OS grid reference TQ6264. Ash and Ridley were formerly separate parishes. Both were part of Dartford Rural District and Axstane Hundred . [REDACTED] Media related to Ash-cum-Ridley at Wikimedia Commons 51°22′N 0°18′E / 51.36°N 0.30°E / 51.36; 0.30 This Kent location article
10-611: A reference to the personal name Acca. In the time of Edward I, the King and the Archbishop of Canterbury were then its lords paramount . In the 20th year of the reign of Edward III (1347, just before the Black Death ) this hundred answered for a total of 14.725 knights' fees. Alternative spellings: Achestan (as above), Axston, Axstone, Axtane, Axton The hundred included the parishes of The Hundred of Dartford and Wilmington did not exist at
15-461: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Axstane Hundred Axstane was a hundred in the county of Kent , England . The Hundred of Axstane lay south-east of Dartford and Wilmington Hundred. It is called Achestan in Domesday Book, but by the reign of Edward I it was called Axstane. Its name has been interpreted as referring to an oak bearing stony land, or alternatively
20-647: The addition of Wilmington and Crayford . Dartford Poor Law Union was formed on 19 May 1836, covering roughly the same area as the Hundred of Axstane. Its operation was overseen by an elected Board of Guardians, 24 in number, representing the following 21 constituent parishes (figures in brackets indicate numbers of Guardians if more than one): Ash, Bexley (2), Crayford (2), Darenth, Dartford (2), Eynsford, Erith, Farningham, Fawkham, Hartley, Horton Kirby, Kingsdown, Longfield, Lullingstone, Ridley, Southfleet, Stone, Sutton-at-Hone, Swanscombe, East Wickham, Wilmington. The area
25-472: The time of the Norman Conquest, and the parishes of Dartford and Wilmington were accounted as part of Axstane in Domesday Book. The importance of the hundred courts declined from the 17th century, and most of their powers were extinguished with the establishment of county courts in 1867. In 1894 the Hundred was succeeded by Dartford Rural District , which was then created out of the same parishes, with
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