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Antrobus Soul Cakers
Antrobus may refer to: *Antrobus (surname) *Antrobus, Cheshire, a village in Cheshire, England *Antrobus baronets The Antrobus Baronetcy, of Antrobus in the County Palatine of Chester, is a title in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom. It was created on 22 May 1815 for Edmund Antrobus, of Antrobus Hall, Antrobus, Cheshire, a Fellow of the Royal Society, ...
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Antrobus (surname)
Antrobus is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Charles Antrobus (1933–2002), British Governor-General of St. Vincent and the Grenadines * Edmund Antrobus (other), several people *Geoffrey Antrobus (1904–1991), South African cricketer * Gibbs Antrobus (1793–1861), British diplomat and politician * John Antrobus (cricketer) (1806–1878), English clergyman and cricketer * John Antrobus (born 1933), British playwright and scriptwriter * Laverne Antrobus (born 1966), British child psychologist and television presenter * Paul Antrobus (1935–2015), Canadian Baptist missionary and professor of psychology * Peggy Antrobus (born 1935), Grenadian feminist activist, author, and scholar * Raymond Antrobus (born 1986), British poet, educator and writer * Robert Antrobus (1830–1911), British businessman, politician and cricketer *Yvonne Antrobus (born 1940), British novelist, abridger, radio dramatist, and actress Fictional characters: *George and Maggie Antr ...
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Antrobus, Cheshire
Antrobus is a civil parish and village in Cheshire, England, immediately to the south of Warrington. It lies within the unitary authority of Cheshire West and Chester, and has a population of 832, reducing to 791 at the 2011 Census. The parish is the most northeasterly point of Cheshire West and Chester, and as such borders both Warrington and Cheshire East. As well as Antrobus village centre itself, the parish includes other large hamlets at Frandley, about one mile south-west from the main village, and Crowley, about two miles to the north-east. The village shop and post office is owned and run cooperatively by the villagers for the benefit of the community having previously closed in 2003. Etymology The placename is recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 as ''Entrebus'', and in the Pipe Rolls of Cheshire of 1282 as ''Anterbus''. The derivation of the name is from the Old Norse personal name Eindrithi or Andrithi, with the Old Norse ''buski'' ("shrub, bush or thicket"), the w ...
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