Though often listed as a single entity, Great and Little Abington have since early medieval times been two parishes divided by the
River Granta and remain so. The southernmost of the two, Great Abington, covers and is bounded to the south by the county border with
Essex, to the west by a branch of the
Icknield Way (now the
A11), and to the east by the parish of
Hildersham. Little Abington covers , again bordered by the Icknield Way and Hildersham to the west and east, and by the ancient thoroughfare of
Wool Street to the north. The village history dates back to the
Bronze Age, some 4000 years ago. The
Saxons gave the village its name, originally called "estate named after Abba", and the village was listed as
Abintone in the
Domesday Book. The 'Great' and 'Little' prefixes came later: the Latin
magna is observed from 1218 and the Modern English
great from 1523 while the Latin
parva is observed from 1218 and the Middle English
littel from 1336. In the decades before the Second World War the
Land Settlement Association created a site to the south of Great Abington consisting of over sixty houses and plots of land for unemployed miners mainly from the former shipyards of Tyneside and coalfields of
Yorkshire and
Durham. The Cambridge to
Haverhill railway line that opened in 1865 crossed Great Abington just south of the village, but closed in 1967. The medieval
Cambridge to
Colchester road that was the main route through the village was by-passed in the 1960s. ==Churches==