Chulmleigh ( ) is a small Saxon hilltop market town and civil parish in North Devon, in the heart of the English county of Devon. It lies north west of Exeter, just north of the Mid Devon boundary, linked by the A377 and B3096 roads.
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Chulmleigh ( ) is a small Saxon hilltop market town and civil parish in North Devon, in the heart of the English county of Devon. It lies north west of Exeter, just north of the Mid Devon boundary, linked by the A377 and B3096 roads.
==History== The first documentary reference to the place is in the Domesday Book of 1086 where it is recorded as Calmonlevge. The name derives from the Old English personal name Ceolmund and the common place-name element leah which has various meanings including "woodland", "a woodland clearing" and "meadow". At the time of Domesday the land was held by Baldwin the Sheriff from whom it passed to the Courtenay family, who made the settlement a borough in the mid-thirteenth century. Situated on the main road between Exeter and Barnstaple, Chulmleigh thrived during the 17th and 18th centuries; it was a centre of wool production, had a good market and three cattle fairs. The wool trade had ceased by the early 19th century, but the road traffic kept the town prosperous until a new turnpike road bypassed the town in about 1830; the opening in 1854 of the North Devon Railway also contributed to its decline.
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