Aylesbury is the county town of Buckinghamshire situated in the South East of England and is twinned with Bourg-en-Bresse, France. The town centre is a busy area and has many pubs, clubs and restaurants to visit, Friday and Saturday nights can be very lively. The Hop Pole on the Bicester Road has been voted into the top 20 pubs in the UK and Mango in the town centre of Aylesbury is popular not only with the lesbian and gay community but is also very well known for its lively venue for all. Whether you live in Aylesbury or you are just visiting we can arrange for one of our
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Although Aylesbury is of Old English origin excavations in the town centre in 1985 discovered an Iron Age hillfort dating from the early fourth century BC. In Anglo-Saxon times Aylesbury was a major market town and was also famous as the burial place of Saint Osyth, whose shrine attracted pilgrims. At the time of the Norman Conquest the King took the manor of Aylesbury for himself and the Domesday Book lists it as a royal manor. In 1529 Aylesbury was declared the county town of Buckinghamshire by King Henry VIII and Aylesbury Manor was one of the many properties owned by Thomas Boleyn who was the father of Anne Boleyn. Previously the county town for Buckinghamshire was Buckingham.
Modern Aylesbury has doubled its population since the 1960s, this has been due to the new housing developments which include many London overspill housing estates which have been built to ease the pressure on the capital and to move people from the crowded inner city slums to far more favourable locations. Sadly Aylesbury more than many other Market towns had substantial areas of its own heart demolished in the 1950s/1960s to make way for a number of commercial developments, many of the demolished houses were 16th-18th century and many were in good repair. Aylesbury’s population increased between 2003-2005 when a new housing estate designed to cater for approximately eight thousand people was built, this was on the north side of the town and was sandwiched between the A41 (Akeman Street) and the A413, and the expansion of Fairford Leys Village.