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Huttoft
Huttoft is a small village in the East Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England. It is situated approximately east from the market town of Alford, and on the A52 road between Ingoldmells and Sutton-on-Sea. == Etymology == Huttoft is listed three times in the 1086 ''Domesday Book'' as ''Hotoft'',〔Albert Hugh Smith, ''English Place-names Elements'', 2 volumes, Cambridge, 1972.〕 in the manors of both Huttoft and Greetham in the Calcewath Hundred of the South Riding of Lindsey. The combined listings record over 19 households, and 20 villagers, 23 smallholders, 69 freemen, 20 ploughlands, and meadows of . Before the Norman Conquest Earl Harold was lord of Greetham; this in 1086 transferred to Earl Hugh of Chester who also became tenant-in-chief to King William I. The 1086 tenant-in-chief of Huttoft was Alfred of Lincoln. Huttoft is an Anglo-Norse place name derived from Old English ''hoh'' "decline", "slope" and Old Norse ''topt'' "site of a house". However, the ''Dictionary of British Place Names'' defines Huttoft as a "homestead on a spur of land."〔Mills, Anthony David (2003); ''A Dictionary of British Place Names'', Oxford University Press, revised edition (2011), p.252. ISBN 019960908X〕 ''De Beaurepaire'' states that it is the same name as the Hottot; Hotot (f. e. Hotot-en-Auge) ; Hautot (former ''Hotot''. f. e. Hautot-sur-Seine) in Normandy.〔de Beaurepaire, François; ''Les noms des communes et anciennes paroisses de la Seine-Maritime'', éditions Picard 1979. p. 92. ISBN 2708400401〕
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