About Cuddington
Cuddington is a village within the Aylesbury Vale district in Buckinghamshire, England. It is close to the Oxfordshire border, and about six miles west of Aylesbury. Cuddington is a pretty village with the postcode of HP18. Our attractive and seductive Cuddington escorts love to visit this area, with its quaint country pubs, excellent eating houses and beautiful countryside. They have many regular clients that live in or around the village of Cuddington and other clients that will be using Diamond Escorts for the very first time.
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The name Cuddington is Old English, Anglo-Saxon, in origin, and means "Cudda's estate." In the Domesday Book of 1086 it was recorded as Cudintuna. Anciently the village was the location of a medicinal spring of great repute, though its exact location is unknown. The village church of St Nicholas dates from the 12th Century but was much restored in 1857. During the Second World War the King of Norway who was staying at the nearby Hartwell House attended services at the village church.
Cuddington is centred around the village green and the road junction linking Aylesbury, Long Crendon and Haddenham. The majority of the original houses were built on the north side but in the last 50 years or so, new homes have been built predominantly on the south side. The current population is around 550 residents. Two of the most famous residents of Cuddington were Jonathan and David Dimbleby.
Public houses at the turn of the twentieth century provided one of the main leisure activities for Cuddington villagers, although at this time few women appear to have frequented public houses, particularly on their own. In common with other public houses at the time, beer was the main drink, although some spirits were consumed. Cigarettes were sold but few public houses provided sandwiches, let alone meals. Most men took the opportunity to converse with each other and it seems that although local events would be the main talking points, national and international affairs would also be discussed. In an age before television and radio, newspapers, this conversation provided the main sources of entertainment.











