Medieval The
Domesday Book of 1086 records the parish in the
hundred of
Culvestan. The book records that at the time the
manor of Culmington was held by
Earl Roger of Shrewsbury and valued at £6. The area was entrusted to the Earl by his cousin,
King William. 12 villagers were recorded in the parish, with a total of 4 slaves. Before the control of the Earl, the area of Culmington and much of the Shropshire county belonged to
Edric the Wild. He is reputed to have held the Welsh border with a heavy hand. The Domesday Book records the name as "Comintone". The Saxon border
thegn, Edric the Wild, held the areas of Sireton, Comitome and Elsich. Known today as Serifton, Culmington and Elsich respectively. The Saxon hundred of Culvestan was replaced in the reign of
Henry I by the hundred of
Munslow, of which Culmington was made a part. The names of Culmington and the hundred of Culvestan are similar but it is not clear whether the two share a common
toponymy, with Culmington's name possibly deriving from "the estate of
Cuthhelm". The meaning of the first element of Culvestan is also uncertain, and may derive from another personal name, possibly
Cuthwulf. The Domesday Book records two slightly different spellings of the hundred's name – twice as
Colmestan(
e) and once as
Comestane – which are more similar to Culmington (which was spelled as
Comintone). However this is believed to be the possible result of assimilation to the name of Culmington by the scribe. In the 19th century Culmington was described as: : "a township and a parish in Ludlow district, Salop. The township lies on the river Corve, 3 miles NE of Onibury r. station, and 4½ N by W of Ludlow. The parish includes also the townships of Burley, Siefton, and Bache and Norton; and its post town is Bromfield, Salop." In 1929 Frederic Kelly completed another survey of Culmington and noted changes to the area. A tablet was added to the rear wall of the church bearing the names of all that fell during the
Great War. By 1929, Culmington had attained a post office and laundry. A district nurse also visited the parish. A bus service was initially provided by Evans of Aston, that travelled to Ludlow. Back in the cold winter of 2010, All saints Church allowed local residents access to their stockpile of wood. This kept the local residents warm, this was until a local man was seen with a wheelbarrow taking all the logs for himself, meanwhile the rest of the village froze. ==Demography==