Linch is an Anglican parish, and a loose collection of hamlets that make up the civil parish of the same name in the Chichester District of West Sussex, England, northwest of Midhurst. It has an eighteenth-century church dedicated to St Luke.
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Linch is an Anglican parish, and a loose collection of hamlets that make up the civil parish of the same name in the Chichester District of West Sussex, England, northwest of Midhurst. It has an eighteenth-century church dedicated to St Luke.
==History== ===Norman period=== Linch (Lince) was listed in the Domesday Book (1086) in the ancient hundred of Easebourne as having 14 households: seven villagers, five smallholders and two slaves; with woodland, meadows, ploughing land and a church, it had a value to the lord of the manor, Robert, son of Theobald, of £5.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).