Haslingefeld appears in the
Domesday Book with a population of 400, but there is archaeological evidence of people living in the vicinity 3,000 years ago . An
Anglo-Saxon cemetery was discovered in the 1870s on Cantelupe Road, but unfortunately not carefully excavated. The name Haslingfield is thought to be derived as follows: -field is an Anglo-Saxon suffix meaning cleared land in site of woods, while Hasling probably derives from the Haeslingas, a local band of people that lived here. In a hypothesis, the valley of the
Bourn Brook, Cambridgeshire is put forward as the location of the
Battle of Brunanburh fought in 937. The battle, the location of which is unknown and has been speculated to have taken place in over 40 locations from South West England to Scotland, is suggested to have taken place close to the brook, on the open fields of Haslingfield,
Harlton and
Little Eversden. The Church of All Saints was consecrated in 1352, and while much of the building dates from the 14th Century, the chancel walls date from the 12th century. On White Hill behind the village there used to be a small chapel but all trace has since disappeared. The
Tudor manor house was built by
Sir Thomas Wendy, lord of the manor at the time, and used to be Haslingfield Hall, a large mansion. Only one wing of the house remains, as the Manor, renovated and extended. The
village sign shows
Queen Elizabeth I who stayed one night at the Manor in the year 1564. During her stay she is supposed to have lost a ring and a number of ring hunts have been held in recent times. The economy of the community has been based on farming for most of its existence. There was a short period of mining for
coprolite, used to make fertilizer in the late 19th century. The
Earl De La Warr sold his estates in Haslingfield to
John Chivers who planted fruit for his
jam-making factory in
Histon. ==Notable people==