About Haddenham
Haddenham is a large village and is also a civil parish within the Aylesbury Vale district in Buckinghamshire. The estimated population in 2011 was 8,385. Haddenham is situated about 5 miles south-west of Aylesbury and 2 miles north-east of Thame with a post code area of HP 17. Our beautiful and seductive Haddenham escorts are well known in the Haddenham area and their reputation is second to none. If you are in the Haddenham area tonight and you would like some company, why not call us and arrange for one of our delightful and elegant escorts to visit you, she would be the ideal companion for you to either explore the area or just relax within the comfortable surroundings of your home or hotel room.
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In Haddenham there are five pubs, The Kings Head, Red Lion, Rose and Thistle, Rising Sun and the Green Dragon. Two former pubs are now restaurants, the Crown is now the House of Spice and the Wagon and Horses is now a Chinese restaurant.
The village name is Anglo-Saxon Hadingahm, "the home of the Hadding tribe". There is an intriguing possibility that the first villagers were members of the Hadding tribe from Haddenham in Cambridgeshire. It is known that the first Anglo-Saxons to settle in the Vale of Aylesbury were followers of Cuthwulf, from Cottenham in Cambridgeshire, who marched south-west to the Thames after defeating the British at the Battle of Bedcanford in 571. It was listed in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Hedreham, but by 1142 had taken on its more modern form and was called Hedenham.
From the Norman Conquest to the time of the Dissolution of the Monasteries the village was in the possession of the Convent of St Andrew in Rochester. King Henry VIII gained possession of the village after the dissolution and held it until his death, after which it passed to his daughter Elizabeth I. The village had a Royal charter as a market town between 1294 and 1301. The market was short-lived because the influential manor of Thame objected due to a significant loss in trade because of the rival market held so close by.
It does however have its own industrial area adjoining the small grass-strip airfield, a commercial district and a station on the main line from Birmingham to London, Marylebone.
Haddenham is also the home of Tiggywinkles, the animal welfare charity and veterinary hospital, and hosts a biannual beer festival. Several photographers and artists are based in the village and use the beautiful surroundings as a backdrop.










