The name was recorded in the
Domesday Book of 1086 under "Blarewiche". It has several possible explanations including "bladder-plant specialised-farm", a form of the name "blackthorn" or "settlement where
bladderwort grows". Blatherwyke Hall was built in 1720 by
Thomas Ripley, and the philanthropist
Mary Jane Kinnaird was born there. The hall fell derelict and was demolished in 1948. A large stable building survives with the inscription "D, OB 1770" for Donatus O'Brien.
Holy Trinity Church is
Norman in origin. There is a monument to Sir Humphrey Stafford (d.1575), the builder of
Kirby Hall, and also
Thomas Randolph (d.1635), the poet and dramatist commissioned by Sir Christopher Hatton. ==In popular culture==