The place-name Orston seems to contain an
Old English personal name,
Osica, with
-ingtūn (Old English), a settlement called after, or connected with..., so probably, "farm/settlement connected with Osica". Some early spellings are
Oschintone in the
Domesday Book of 1086,
Orskinton in 1242,
Orston in 1284, and
Horston in 1428. It lay in
Bingham Wapentake (hundred) until
such units were abolished under the
Local Government Act 1894. The population of Orston was 351 in 1801, 391 in 1821, and 439 in 1831. More detail on the village history and sources for it appears on the village website. There is a short description of the village in 1870–1872 in
John Marius Wilson's
Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales. Orston farming showed a variant of the
open-field system with four fields instead of three. An
enclosure act was passed in 1793. A survey of Orston's present appearance and history as a conservation area was made in 2010. == Governance ==