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Lamport

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5-553: Lamport may refer to: Places [ edit ] Lamport, Buckinghamshire , England, a former hamlet Lamport, Northamptonshire , England, a village and civil parish Other uses [ edit ] Lamport (surname) Lamport Hall , Lamport, Northamptonshire, a Grade I Listed House Lamport railway station , Northamptonshire Lamport Stadium , an arena in Toronto, Canada See also [ edit ] Lamport and Holt ,

10-540: A defunct UK merchant shipping line Lampart (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Lamport . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lamport&oldid=1126977420 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description

15-500: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Lamport, Buckinghamshire 52°01′44″N 0°59′49″W  /  52.029°N 0.997°W  / 52.029; -0.997 Lamport (occasionally also Langport ) was a hamlet in the parish of Stowe in north Buckinghamshire , England. It was cleared by the Temple family, as a result of enclosures , after 1739, to improve

20-486: The amenity value of their new park at Stowe. The hamlet's name is Old English , meaning long town . Lamport consisted of two ancient manors , one of which was owned by the priory of Oseney and passed to Stowe; the other seems to have belonged to Luffield Abbey , whose estate had passed, by 1350, to a family named after the hamlet, and subsequently passed by marriage, in 1416, to the Dayrells (whose name continues in

25-413: The village name of Lillingstone Dayrell ). It was annexed to Stowe to provide homes for the staff and servants of the new manor house there . In 1637, Peter Temple enclosed land around Lamport for his deer park. This aggrieved the Dayrells, who owned some of the enclosed land. A dispute, occasionally violent, ensued and eventually led to litigation in 1640 and a petition to Parliament. Notwithstanding

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