About Monks Risborough
Monks Risborough is a village within the county of Buckinghamshire, England, with a postcode area of HP27. Our beautiful and seductive Monks Risborough escorts are well known in the Monks Risborough area and their reputation is second to none. If you are in the 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. Whatever entertainment you choose, you will be astounded by the ability of your escort, she will brighten up your evening, entertain you and make it her one goal to please you to the utmost, so that your evening in Monks Risborough will be an unforgettable one.
The area around Monks Risborough has a long rich history, recorded back to 3000BC. The parish is long and narrow. It is almost six miles in length, but it is only one and a quarter miles wide at the widest part and barely four hundred yards at the narrowest parts. Like the neighbouring Chiltern 'strip parishes' the estate was originally laid out so as to include different types of land, fertile land below the scarp of the Chiltern Hills, a section of the scarp itself and grazing or woods above it.
In 1535, immediately before the dissolution of the monasteries, King Henry VIII, acting against Thomas Cromwell, ordered a valuation to be made of all the ecclesiastical property in England. The manor of Monks Risborough was included in this valuation under the heading "Properties of the Church of Christ at Canterbury". The Manor, which was let out at a rent by the Priory, was shown as having a rent of £9 a year.
Christ Church Priory was finally dissolved in 1539 and the manor of Monks Risborough was put up for sale by the Royal Commissioners in 1541. It changed hands by sale on several subsequent occasions until it became vested in the Earl of Buckinghamshire in the 18th or early 19th Century.
On Whiteleaf Hill, is an oval Neolithic barrow, there was a single burial within the barrow, a middle aged man between 5'6" and 5'9" in height, with a long and narrow skull, badly worn teeth and arthritic joints. The remains appeared to have been placed between two large vertical posts, 1.2 metres apart. Pottery shards and animal bones were found at the core of the mound and the excavators suggest that these came from ceremonial feasting when the mound was built. Radio-carbon dating has shown that the death, the burial and the building of the mound probably all took place within the period 3,750-3,100 B.C., but at different times within that period. The ceremonial burial could have been 45150 years after the death and the completion of the mound could be up to 200 years after that. Similar delays have been shown to have occurred at other sites. The status of the individual and the actual nature of the events are unknown, but he must have been a man of significance in local society.


