The name Pebworth derives from the
Old English Peobbaworð meaning 'Peobba's
enclosure'.
Pebworth is mentioned in the
Domesday Book "
Hugh de Grandmesnil holds Pebworth. There are two hides and one virgate. Two thegns held it as two manors. There are three ploughs and one
villan and one
bordar and seven slaves. The same Hugh holds Broad Marston. There are two hides." Pebworth is known as one of the Shakespeare villages.
William Shakespeare is said to have joined a party of Stratford folk which set itself to outdrink a drinking club at
Bidford-on-Avon, and as a result of his labours in that regard to have fallen asleep under the crab tree of which a descendant is still called Shakespeare's Tree. When morning dawned his friends wished to renew the encounter but he wisely said "No I have drunk with “Piping Pebworth, Dancing
Marston, Haunted Hillboro’, Hungry
Grafton, Dodging
Exhall, Papist
Wixford, Beggarly Broom and Drunken Bidford” and so, presumably, I will drink no more. The story is said to date from the 17th century but of its truth or of any connection of the story or the verse to Shakespeare there is no evidence. ==Pebworth bells==