Alwinton :The History
Standard Works NCH XV (1940), 405-21; Dixon 1903, 213-38; Dixon 1985, II, 36-7.
Prehistoric Archaeology
- Alwinton : Palaeolithic and Mesolithic (500,000 BC – 5000 BC)
- Alwinton : Neolithic (c. 5000 BC – c. 2000 BC)
- Alwinton : Bronze Age (c. 2000 BC – 700 BC)
- Alwinton : Iron Age (700 BC – AD 50)
- Alwinton : Romano-British Period and After
Township and Parish, Barony and Manor
Before discussing further the medieval origins and development of Alwinton village, it is necessary to describe the various different territorial units within which it was incorporated, and which provided the framework for the development of the community. Each of these related to different aspects of the settlement's communal relations, both internal and external. This is important not only in providing an understanding of the territorial framework which the population of Alwinton inhabited, but also because it may provide clues to the early medieval history of the locality.
- Alwinton : Parish and Township
- Lordship : the Umfravilles and Vescis
- Lordship in the Hills: The Liberty of Redesdale and the Monastic Landholdings in Kidland
- Lordship in the Valley: The Barony of Alnwick
- The Ten Towns of Coquetdale
- Alwinton : Conclusions
The Medieval Settlement
- Alwinton : Layout Of The Village And Township
- High Alwinton : The Village Settlement
- Low Alwinton : The Church Complex
- Bifocal Settlement : Discussion
- Bondage Holdings, Unfree Tenants And Free Tenants
- The Horsley Holdings
- Alwinton : The Parish Church
- The Church of St Michael and All Angels : P.F. Ryder
- The Church of St Michael and All Angels : Discussion
Alwinton In the 16th - 17th Centuries
- Alwinton In the 16th - 17th Centuries
- Alwinton : Population
- Alwinton: Mills
- The Parish Church in the 16th - 17th Centuries





