Homepage
Home
Search
Catalogue Search
Name Search
Place Search
Contact Us
Record
Entry Type
Corporate
Corporate Name
Manor of Hope
Also Known As
Hope Rectory
Place
Hope
Epithet
Manor
History
At the time of the Domesday Survey in 1086 the manor of Hope was part of the ancient demesnes of the King, with the berewicks of Edale, Aston, Shatton, Offerton, Tideswell and Stoke. According to Lysons it would seem afterwards to have been regarded as part of the manor of High Peak and later as part of Castleton, and was said to have been held on lease by the Dukes of Devonshire in the 19th century.
The manor of Hope would seem to be based on what was originally the manor of the rectory of Hope. The church of Hope, with its rectory manor and the chapel of Tideswell, was given by King John to the Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield and subsequently transferred to the Dean and Chapter of Lichfield. In the reign of King Edward VI the rectoral manor was granted by the Dean and Chapter to Ralph Gell. The various court books name members of the Gell family as being lords from at least 1736 to 1801. Members of the Hall family are then recorded as lords of Hope, starting with Micah Hall in 1803, until 1887. The Dukes of Devonshire then seem to have been lords into the 20th century.
Source
Magna Britannia: Volume 5: Derbyshire by Daniel and Samuel Lysons (1817) pp. 183-184
The History, Topography and Directory of Derbyshire by T. Bulmer (1895) pp. 187-188
Derbyshire Archaeological Journal Vol. 37 (1915), pp.19-42, “Rectory Manors in Derbyshire” by S.O. Addy
Court rolls (early 18th cent) at the Derbyshire Record Office
Court books (late 18th cent to 20th cent) at Chatsworth House
Authorised Form of Name
Hope; Manor of Hope; Manor
Show related Catalog records.
Add to My Items
Sir John Franklin (1786-1847), naval officer and arctic explorer
Useful Links
Viewing the records
I can't find what I'm looking for
Research Guides
Reproducing items from the collections
Picture the Past - old photos
Heritage Mapping Portal
Online Exhibitions
Our Blog
Tweets by DRO
See more Collection highlights
Bryan Donkin Company Ltd of Chesterfield, engineering firm
Local Studies Periodicals
Florence Nightingale
Sir John Franklin (1786-1847), naval officer and arctic explorer
Collection Highlights