The name Hough is
Old English "haga", or 'enclosure'. The village is listed in the
Domesday Book of 1086 as "Hag" and "Hache", comprising 45 households, four mills and a church. It is not clear when the 'le Hill' or 'on the Hill' suffix was added. An extensive
Anglo-Saxon cemetery including both burials and cremations has been excavated on Lovedon Hill. There was also a
medieval motte-and-bailey castle situated on a natural mound, known as Castle Hill, on which the church of
All Saints was later built. It is an ancient
scheduled monument.
Hough Priory was located here, dependent on the
Augustinian Abbey of Notre Dame du Voeu in
Cherbourg; it was founded about 1164 and dissolved in about 1414. In 1432 it was granted to the
Carthusian order of Mountgrace. There are no remains. ==Landmarks==