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Inkberrow is a village in Worcestershire, England, often thought to be the model for Ambridge, the fictional setting of BBC Radio 4's long-running series The Archers. [1] In particular, The Bull, the fictional Ambridge pub , is supposed to be based on The Old Bull in Inkberrow.
Inkberrow Castle was situated in the village of Inkberrow in Worcestershire, some 10 km south of Redditch (grid reference. It was a castle built between 1154 and 1216 which was destroyed in 1233. A moat remains which may be that of the castle or of a later manor house built on or near the site of the castle. Earthworks are also present
The castles displayed on each map are those listed in the List of castles in England for the corresponding county.Click on the red or green dot to display a detailed map showing the location of the castle.
Sporting Club Inkberrow Football Club (SC Inkberrow FC) is a football club based in Inkberrow, Worcestershire, England. They are currently members of the Hellenic Football League Premier Division and play at Sands Road, Inkberrow. The Football Club forms part of the wider Inkberrow Football Club, and the Sporting Club Inkberrow charity.
Russell himself was already related to the Savages as his mother, Margaret Lygon, was a first cousin to Francis Savage of Elmley Castle (d.1558), from whom the Inkberrow Savages descend. Dormston remained with this family until Robert Savage (1672-1749), who was married to Dorothy (d.1715), daughter of John Stanford of Salford Hall in Abbots ...
The Worcester Basin or Worcester Graben is a sedimentary basin in central England, filled with mainly Permian and Triassic rocks. It trends roughly north-south and lies between the East Malverns Fault in the west and the Inkberrow Fault in the east.
Inkberrow tower, Little Inkberrow. The tower was built in 1996 to disguise a mobile phone antenna. Little Inkberrow is a village in Worcestershire, England.. Ralph Ardern inherited the Worcestershire manor of Little Inkberrow [1] between 1382 (the death of his father, Henry de Ardern) and 1408 (the death of his mother).
The District of Wychavon wards of: Dodderhill; Harvington and Norton; Inkberrow. [3] In addition to the Wychavon Borough ward of Inkberrow, which was already part of the seat, the two wards of Dodderhill to the north, and Harvington and Norton to the south, were transferred from Mid Worcestershire (renamed Droitwich and Evesham).