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・ Horní Habartice
・ Horní Heřmanice
・ Horní Heřmanice (Třebíč District)
・ Horní Heřmanice (Ústí nad Orlicí District)
・ Horní Hoštice (Javorník)
・ Horní Jelení
・ Horní Jiřetín
・ Hornsea Mere
・ Hornsea Museum
・ Hornsea Pottery
・ Hornsea Rail Trail
・ Hornsea Sailing Club
・ Hornsea School and Language College
・ Hornsea Town railway station
・ Hornsey
Hornsey (parish)
・ Hornsey (UK Parliament constituency)
・ Hornsey and Wood Green (UK Parliament constituency)
・ Hornsey by-election, 1907
・ Hornsey by-election, 1916
・ Hornsey by-election, 1921
・ Hornsey by-election, 1941
・ Hornsey by-election, 1957
・ Hornsey Central Hospital
・ Hornsey Co-operative Credit Union
・ Hornsey College of Art
・ Hornsey depot
・ Hornsey Housing Trust
・ Hornsey Lane
・ Hornsey railway station


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Hornsey (parish) : ウィキペディア英語版
Hornsey (parish)
Hornsey was an ancient parish in the county of Middlesex. It was both a civil parish, used for administrative purposes, and an ecclesiastical parish of the Church of England.
== Civil parish ==
Hornsey Parish was probably formed in about the thirteenth century at the time a church was built in the village of Hornsey. The Parish fell within the Ossulstone Hundred of Middlesex, and in later times it was part of the Finsbury division of the Hundred. The Hornsey Parish boundary ran from Stoke Newington, in the south, through Stroud Green to Highgate in the west, and from near Colney Hatch in the north, past Muswell Hill, and a detached portion of Clerkenwell Parish, eastwards to the Tottenham Parish border and then along Green Lanes back to Stoke Newington. In the north a field called Hornsey Detached No.1 stretched up to Colney Hatch and at the southern end there were another two fields, Hornsey Detached Nos. 2 and 3 by Newington Green. The parish also owned another field in Canonbury, Islington, which was surrendered to the Parish by Sir Thomas Draper, Bt., in 1668.〔,()〕
The vestry of the parish was entrusted with various civil administrative functions from the 17th century. Unusually the parish was divided between the Highgate (upper) side and the Hornsey (lower) side, and separate vestry officers appointed for each side.〔Vestry Minutes in London Metropolitan Archives.〕 After 1837 the civil administration changed. The Hornsey vestry established a Public Health and Drainage committee in1851; this committee only had a short life as it was replaced, in 1854, with a Highways Board, and a full Local Board was established in 1867. The Local Board gave way to the Urban District Council in 1894/5 which governed the Parish until 1903, when it became obtained Borough status. By this time South Hornsey had separated and become an autonomous local authority from Hornsey, which had become part of the Poor Law Union of Edmonton.
In 1865, the southern part of the parish, consisting of the Brownswood Park area and the detached pieces surrounded by the parishes of Hackney and Stoke Newington adopted the Local Government Act 1858, and formed the South Hornsey Local Board.
The Local Government Act 1894 reconstituted the two local board districts as urban districts, and divided the parish into the two civil parishes of Hornsey and South Hornsey.
In 1899 the South Hornsey urban district and civil parish were absorbed by the Metropolitan Boroughs of Stoke Newington and Islington in the County of London. At the same time the detached part of the parish of Clerkenwell was added to Hornsey.
The urban district and civil parish of Hornsey remained in Middlesex, being incorporated as the Municipal Borough of Hornsey in 1903. The civil parish was abolished when the borough became part of the London Borough of Haringey in 1965.



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