Brokers Mortgage in Ashby de la Zouch, LE67

These Brokers Mortgage companies are located in Ashby de la Zouch
No added Brokers Mortgage are located in Ashby de la Zouch
The following Brokers Mortgage are the ones that we have found closest to Ashby de la Zouch
The Mortgage Gallery
Company Type: Financial Adviser
8 Millers Walk
, LE67 2BZ
|
Tel. 01530 814391
Fax. 01530 814391
|
The Money Puzzle
Company Type: Mortgage Brokers
111 Belvoir Road
, LE67 3PH
|
Tel. 01530 811643
|
Hadenglen PLC
Company Type: Independent Mortgage Advice
First Floor Hadenglen House
, LE67 3WD
|
Tel. 01530 278400
Fax. 01530 278400
|
Home Wise
Company Type: Brokers Mortgage
121 Bardon Rd
, LE67 4BF
|
Tel. 01530 812340
|
Silver Moon Ltd
Company Type: Brokers Mortgage
marlborough centre/Marlborough Sq
, LE67 3WD
|
Tel. 01530 512670
|
Lighthouse One Ltd
Company Type: Mortgage Advisors
1 Belvoir Rd
, LE67 3PH
|
Tel. 01530 276966
|
Krishna Agencies
Company Type: Mortgage Brokers
71 Ratcliffe Road
, LE11 1LG
|
Tel. 01509 217869
|
John Vincent
Company Type: Financial Adviser
39 Hathern Road
, LE12 9RP
|
Tel. 01509 600333
|
Charnwood IFA
Company Type: Financial Adviser
Brooklyn House/44 Brook St
, LE12 9RG
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Tel. 01509 502999
|
Sure Finance
Company Type: Mortgage Brokers
B/43 Nottingham Rd
, LE11 1ER
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Tel. 01509 212124
|
Vincent John
Company Type: Mortgages
39 Hathern Rd
, LE12 9RP
|
Tel. 01509 600333
|
First Call
Company Type: Independent Mortgage Advice
10 Linkfield Rd
, LE12 7DL
|
Tel. 0116-240 8617
|
Independent Mortgage Advice in towns near Ashby de la Zouch, LE67
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Places of interest in Ashby de la Zouch, LE67
Lying on the western fringe of Charnwood Forest, Thringstone lends its name to an important geological structure which is not exposed at the surface, known as the Thringstone Fault. Formed during prehistoric volcanic times, this runs from Bardon Hill to Ticknall and forms an abrupt boundary to the eastern part of the Leicestershire and South Derbyshire coalfield.
Whitwick had a 12th century motte and bailey castle, although no remains are left. This was held by the Earls of Leicester, though it was recorded as being ruinous by 1427. The foundations are said to have been visible at the end of the 18th century and a wall was still to be seen on the north side in 1893.[5] A licence to crenellate the structure was issued in 1320 to 'Henricus de Bello Monte, Consanguineus Regis'. The building work resulting from this licence may have provoked an attack by Sir John Talbot. Beaumont's claim to the land was from wife's inheritance and, it seems, Talbot felt he had a claim to Whitwick. Twenty years later the capital message was worth nothing.[6]
Since boundary changes implemented for the 2007 local elections, the wards of Kettering Borough Council have been as follows:
Mawsley was first planned in 1993 by Northamptonshire County Council, and construction began in 2001. The village is very nearly complete, with a school, doctors surgery and village hall all provided by the developers. Further research has revealed that Mawsley was built on the site of on older village called Mawsley, which vanished around the time of the Black Death[citation needed] A Roman villa was found nearby, as well as other archeological evidence. When the village was planned, a site was set aside for the building of a Public House. The site has recently (as of July 2006) been sold to a company to build and run the pub.
By the 7th century the lands that would eventually become Northamptonshire formed part of the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Mercia.[9] The Mercians converted to Christianity in 654 AD with the death of the pagan king Penda.[10] From about 889 the Kettering area, along with much of Northamptonshire (and at one point almost all of England except for Athelney marsh in Somerset), was conquered by the Danes and became part of the Danelaw, with the ancient trackway of Watling Street serving as the border, until being recaptured by the English under the Wessex king Edward the Elder, son of Alfred the Great, in 917. Northamptonshire was conquered again in 940, this time by the Vikings of York, who devastated the area, only for the county to be retaken by the English in 942.[11]
Information by Wikipedia.com