Kings Bromley or King's Bromley is a village and civil parish in the Lichfield district of Staffordshire, England, about north of Lichfield on the A515 road. The population as of the 2011 census was measured at 1,163.

History

The parish was in Offlow Hundred.

The Norman village church, which dates back to at least 1170, is named All Saints.

The manor was anciently called Brom Legge, and derived its present name from the circumstances of its being the property of the Crown for nearly two centuries after the Norman Conquest, previous to which it had been distinguished as the residence of the Earls of Mercia. Leofric, the husband of the famous Lady Godiva, died here in 1057. Henry III granted the manor to the Corbetts, who sold it, in 1569, to Francis Agard, of Ireland. About 1670 it was sold by Charles Agard to John Newton, of the island of Barbados, and in 1794 it was bequeathed by Sarah Newton to her cousins, John and Thomas Lane. South of Kings Bromley at Bromley Hayes is a marina on the Trent and Mersey Canal.

Spelling

The name of the village and parish seems to be spelled with or without the apostrophe fairly indiscriminately. Both King's Bromley