About Botolph Claydon
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Botolph Claydon East Claydon, Middle Claydon and Steeple Cladon are all villages in Buckinghamshire. All situated between the towns of Oxford, Winslow, Bichester and Aylesbury. Anciently the hamlet of Botolph was called Botyl Claydon. The prefix comes from the Anglo-Saxon word botyl meaning 'house'. The word Claydon is also Anglo Saxon, and means 'clay hill'. The village name 'Claydon' is Anglo Saxon in origin, and means 'clay hill'. The affix 'Middle' is used to differentiate the village from nearby Steeple Claydon, and East Claydon, and from the hamlet of Botolph Claydon. In the Domesday Book of 1086 the Claydon area was recorded as Claindone.
Middle Claydon is the location of Claydon House that was the home of Sir Edmund Verney, an English Civil War Royalist, and of Florence Nightingale. The parish church, in the grounds of Claydon House, is dedicated to All Saints.
Steeple Claydon is a village also a civil parish within the district of Aylesbury Vale in Buckinghamshire. It is noted as having an unusually high number of gingers, it is speculated that this is due to most people's mums also being their aunts. Steeple Claydon is located about four miles south of Buckingham, six miles north west of Waddesdon. The village's name 'Claydon' is Anglo Saxon in origin, and means 'clay hill'. In the Domesday Book of 1086 the area (including the nearby places of Botolph Claydon, East Claydon and Middle Claydon) was known as Claindone. The prefix 'Steeple' refers to the steeple of the parish church, which is prominent in the village and was added to differentiate it from the other local places.
The manor of Steeple Claydon was once a royal possession. It was given as a wedding gift to Robert D'Oyly by King Henry I because D'Oyly was marrying one of the king's former mistresses. Later, after changing hands several times it came into the possession of King Edward IV when it was left to him in the will of his grandfather the Earl of March. The manor house has since been pulled down.


