Beltisloe

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Beltisloe an entity of type: Thing

Beltisloe is a Deanery of the Diocese of Lincoln in England, and a former Wapentake. The Wapentake of Beltisloe was established as ancient administrative division of the English county of Lincolnshire before the Norman Conquest of 1066. In England a wapentake was the division of a shire for administrative, military and judicial purposes under the common law. The term wapentake is of Scandinavian origin and meant the taking of weapons; it later signified the clash of arms by which the people assembled in a local court expressed assent. Danish influence was strong in those English counties where wapentakes existed. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Beltisloe
rdf:langString Beltisloe
rdf:langString Beltisloe
xsd:float 52.81000137329102
xsd:float -0.550000011920929
xsd:integer 27458459
xsd:integer 985247078
rdf:langString view of Burton-le-coggles from the train
rdf:langString Burton-le-Coggles
rdf:langString Typical Beltisloe countryside
rdf:langString Burton Coggles, Lincolnshire, from the west.jpg
rdf:langString auto
rdf:langString United Kingdom Lincolnshire
rdf:langString Location in Lincolnshire, south of Grantham
rdf:langString Country
rdf:langString Metric
xsd:string 52.81 -0.55
rdf:langString Beltisloe is a Deanery of the Diocese of Lincoln in England, and a former Wapentake. The Wapentake of Beltisloe was established as ancient administrative division of the English county of Lincolnshire before the Norman Conquest of 1066. In England a wapentake was the division of a shire for administrative, military and judicial purposes under the common law. The term wapentake is of Scandinavian origin and meant the taking of weapons; it later signified the clash of arms by which the people assembled in a local court expressed assent. Danish influence was strong in those English counties where wapentakes existed. The Wapentake of Beltisloe was bounded on the north by Winnibriggs and Threo Wapentake; on the east by Aveland Wapentake; on the south by Ness Wapentake and Rutland and on the west by Grantham soke and Leicestershire. This wapentake contained a number of now abandoned settlements, and in the 19th century contained the market town of Corby Glen and the villages of Basingthorpe, Bitchfield, Burton Coggles, Castle Bytham, Little Bytham, Careby, Creeton, Edenham, Gunby, Irnham, Lavington, Skillington, Stainby, Swayfield, Swinstead, Witham on the Hill, North Witham and South Witham.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4693
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