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Leafield is a village and civil parish about northwest of in , England. The parish includes the hamlet of Langley, west of Leafield village. The 2011 Census recorded the parish's population as 945. The village is above sea level in the . It was the highest point in Oxfordshire until the 1974 county boundary changes enlarged the county.


Archaeology
There are a number of in the parish, including Leafield Barrow, locally called Barry's Hill Tump, on top of the hill just to the north of the village. Leafield Barrow also has archaeological evidence for being the site of a motte-and-bailey castle called . The would be situated at a position in the village which would have given it a commanding view of the settlement. There are visible earthworks present which would add to the castle's defensive capability. The castle is believed to form a similar shape to that of Ascot d'Oilly Castle.


History
The parish is within the former limits of the forest. The area of forest south of Langley was cleared in 1857–58, leaving straight, regular field boundaries typical of the 18th and 19th century . The village has the remains of a . The steps and lower part of its base are old. A new Gothic Revival shaft and top were added in 1873 in thanksgiving for the village escaping a epidemic. King James I stayed at Langley in August 1605.John Nichols, The Progresses, Processions, and Magnificent Festivities, of King James the First, vol. 1 (London, 1828), p. 529.

Leafield was a dependent chapelry of the ecclesiastical parish of Shipton-under-Wychwood until the 19th century. Leafield's Church of England parish church of Saint Michael and All Angels was designed by Sir George Gilbert Scott, built in 1859 and consecrated in 1860. The was completed in 1874 and has a of six bells, all cast that year by John Taylor & Co of . St. Michael's is now a member of the Forest Edge Benefice. Forest Edge Benefice: Leafield with Wychwood

Leafield Church of England Primary School opened in 1839. It was expanded by the building of additional classrooms in 1871, 1897 and 1904. The 1871 classroom was designed by the architect C.C. Rolfe. Leafield's school district was expanded in 1873 to include , Langley and . Leafield C of E School resisted Oxfordshire County Council's attempts to reorganise it as a junior school until after the Second World War. The school's catchment area was expanded in 1986 to include Ascott-under-Wychwood.


Leafield Technical Centre
A large radio transmission station was sited at Langley from 1912 until 1986. redeveloped the site as a training college, but then closed the site in 1993. It was then used by Tom Walkinshaw Racing (TWR) as a motorsport development centre for the Arrows team, until the team's demise in the 2002 season. From the 2006 season until the 2008 season Leafield Technical Centre was the headquarters of the now-defunct Super Aguri F1 team. Menard Competition Technologies was based at Leafield Technical Centre in 2011. MCT has made the engines for Norton Motorcycles' range of Commando 961 models since 2009. In January 2012 Caterham F1 announced that they would be moving to Leafield from their original base at Hingham, Norfolk. Caterham F1 subsequently went bankrupt and the Technical Centre is now derelict.


Amenities
Leafield has two : The Fox and The Pearl. The Fox was closed for 15 months after Greene King Brewery shut it in January 2010. An independent lessee reopened it in April 2011 and it is now a free house. The Pearl used to be the Potter's Arms, the Spindleberry and the Navy Oak; it is now a Chinese restaurant, takeaway and bar. The Pearl at Leafield The , a circular walking trail, passes through Leafield Lower End.


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