Umberleigh
Umberleigh is a former huge estate within the historical hundred of (North) Tawton, however today a tiny village in North Devon in England. It used to be an ecclesiastical church, however complying with the structure of the church at Atherington it became a part of that church. It forms nonetheless a part of the civil church of Chittlehampton, which is primarily located on the east side of the River Taw. The manor of Umberleigh, which had its own entrance in the Domesday Book of 1086, was totally positioned on the west side of the River Taw as well as was centred on the Nunnery which was given by William the Conqueror to the Holy Trinity Abbey in Caen, Normandy. The site was later on occupied by the manor house of Umberleigh, the present Georgian symptom of which, a huge and grand farmhouse, is called "Umberleigh House". Beside the manor house in about 1275 was founded Umberleigh Chapel, currently a destroy the solitary remaining wall surface of which creates the back wall of a farm carries out shed.