The Edenham name derives from the
Anglo-Saxon ham, meaning 'homestead'. The rest of the name probably derives from
dene, a 'vale in woodland' and
ea, 'river', though 'Eada's homestead' and 'Eada's hemmed-in-land' have also been suggested. The river
East Glen which flows through it is sometimes called the 'Eden' by a process of
back-formation from the name of the village. Edenham appears in the
Domesday Book of 1086 as having 32
villagers, 4 smallholders, 24
freemen, 5 lord's plough teams, and 9 men's plough teams, with of woodland and 29 acres of meadow. The parish was the site of the
Cistercian abbey of
Vaudey, founded in 1147 by
William le Gros, 1st Earl of Albemarle. It was dissolved during the 1536
Suppression. Documents of 1307 mention the existence in Edenham of "a hospital". Since 1516 parish land and villages have been owned by the
de Eresby family of
Grimsthorpe Castle. This major ancestral seat to the north-west of the village influenced Edenham's estate village character. The
de Eresby barony has continued in an unbroken line since 1313, and heads of the family have been
Earls and Dukes of Ancaster and the
Earl of Lindsey. The 19th-century
Baron Willoughby de Eresby built the
Edenham and Little Bytham Railway which connected the village to the
East Coast Main Line at
Little Bytham. Apart from crossing a road in near
Little Bytham station, it ran exclusively on his estate. The Australian poet and novelist
Frederic Manning stayed at the vicarage with the Reverend Arthur Galton after he arrived in the country in 1903. He returned there after the
First World War and began writing
The Middle Parts of Fortune (republished in an expurgated version under the title
Her Privates We). ==Community==