The name of Compton or Combe-Town, a town or place in a valley, derived, according to Dugdale, “from the situation, in a low and deep valley, the word in the British and in the Saxon importing no less,” is generally distributed throughout the southern and midland counties of England: we find it in Surrey, Sussex, Hampshire, Dorsetshire, Devonshire, Somersetshire, Wiltshire, Gloucestershire, Berkshire, Derbyshire, Staffordshire, Worcestershire, and Warwickshire. In some of these counties there are several places of this name, distinguished by different additional designations; in Warwickshire, besides Compton-Wyniate, (or, as I find it described in a deed of the 31st of Edward III. “atte Wynd-yate,” Wind-gate,) there is Long Compton, on the borders of Oxfordshire, Compton-Murdock, now called, from the family of its present owner, Compton-Verney, and Compton-Scorfen, corruptly pronounced Scorpion, a hamlet in the parish of Ilmington ; there is also the parish of Fenny-Compton, between Wormleighton and Farnborough, in the same hundred of Kineton wherein the other four Warwickshire Comptons are situated. The neighbourhood of this last Compton with Compton-Wyniate, or “Compton in the Sole” as it is sometimes called, has been the cause of some difficulty; and, as I think I shall be able to prove, of much confusion in tracing the descents of two ancient families who derived their names from these two villages, one still existing, the other long extinct, and neither related to each other.