The Deepings () are a series of settlements close to the River Welland near the borders of southern Lincolnshire and north western Cambridgeshire in eastern England.

Peterborough is about 8 miles to the south, Spalding about 10 miles to the north east and Stamford about 8 miles to the west.

The area is very low-lying, and gave The Deepings their name (a Saxon name translatable as either 'deep places' or 'deep lands'). The villages are mentioned in the Domesday Book. Deeping Fen lies to the North, and the drainage of it was an important part of seventeenth and eighteenth century land reclamation. It is now the responsibility of the Welland and Deepings Internal Drainage Board.

The Settlements

Lincolnshire

Within the South Kesteven District Council Area:

  • Market Deeping — a market town and the largest of the Deepings settlements
  • Deeping St James — a village and the second largest Deepings settlement. The civil parish of Deeping St James includes the villages of:
  • Frognall
  • Stowgate
  • West Deeping

Within the South Holland District Council Area:

  • Deeping St Nicholas
  • Hop Pole — a hamlet within the Deeping St Nicholas civil parish
  • Tongue End

Cambridgeshire

  • Deeping Gate — a village within the City of Peterborough

History

thumb|right|300px|The old bridge over the [[River Welland connecting Deeping St James and Deeping Gate.]]

Drainage of the area dates back at least as far as the Romans, and the Car Dyke, but the capital involved always required a strong state, and rich men, to improve the land.

See also

  • Deeping St James Priory
  • Saint Guthlac's church, Market Deeping

References

Further reading

  • History of the Deepings (or Three Deepings in a Row) by Florence A. Day (n.d.)
  • The Medieval Fenland by H. C. Darby (first published by The Cambridge University Press, 1940, reprinted by David & Charles, 1974)

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