The present-day Parish of Greatham lies in the county of Hampshire on either side of the old Farnham (Surrey) to Petersfield Turnpike. The 'Domesday Book' of 1086 recorded Greatham as being 'Terra Regis' a Latin term meaning 'Land of the King' indicating that this was once a Royal manor belonging to William the Conqueror himself. In later years the manor passed through many families by marriage and by purchase including the Devenish Marshall Norton Freeland Love Chawner and Coryton families. The name of the village has changed many times however slightly over the years. Greteham Grietham Gretham Grutham Gratham all derived from two separate words the 'Old-English' (Anglo-Saxon) 'ham' meaning 'village estate manor or homestead' and an old Scandinavian word 'griot' or 'gryt' meaning 'stones or stony ground'. Thus the name 'Greotham' came into being literally a 'stony estate' or 'farm on gravel'.