An ancient village listed in the
Domesday Book of 1086, the name comes from the
Old English Gamelingei, meaning "the enclosure of Gamela's people". There has been a settlement on the site since the middle
Bronze Age and there are signs of occupation from the middle
Stone Age. The village may have first been established around a central
green south of the High Street (now known as Church Street); a complex of medieval buildings stood at the east end of the green, but only a
tithe barn and the house known as 'Emplins' remain today. Another focal point was provided by the crossroads at the other end of Church Street and houses spread to the south and east of the junction. In the 16th and 17th centuries, Gamlingay grew to the east towards Dutter End and west to Green End. By 1871, Gamlingay had a population twice as large as that of the
hundred's second-largest parish,
Bourn. was in operation from 1862 until 1968. ==Governance==