Little Langford is a hamlet and former civil parish in Wiltshire, England. Its nearest town is Wilton, about 5 miles (8.0km) to the southeast. It is in the Wylye valley, to the south of the river; the grass fields adjacent to the river were traditionally flood meadows.
In 1086, the Domesday Book survey recorded estates held by Wilton Abbey, Glastonbury Abbey and Edward of Salisbury.[1]
The civil parish was added to Steeple Langford parish in 1934. In 1990, the Wilton estate owned nearly all of the land in the former parish.[1]
Notable sights
Church of St Nicholas of MiraLittle Langford Farm
The Anglican Church of St Nicholas of Mira is Grade II* listed.[2] It dates from the 12th century and was rebuilt in 1864 by T.H. Wyatt,[3] reusing a 12th-century doorway on the south side of the nave.[4] Alexander Hyde, later Bishop of Salisbury, was rector from 1634.[5]
Little Langford farmhouse (c.1858) has a Victorian Gothic entrance tower, lancet windows and crenellations.[6]
Just to the south of the village lies the Iron Age hill-fort of Grovely Castle.
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