[2] The entry mentions a woman of the manor called Leofgyth "who made gold embroideries for the king and queen and still does so".
The site is now part of the Salisbury Plain Training Area and continues in use as Knook Camp, providing temporary accommodation in many small buildings and extending north into Heytesbury parish.
[6] John Marius Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales (1870–1872) described Knook as follows: KNOOK, a parish, with a village, in Warminster district, Wilts; on the river Wiley, the Old Ditch way, and the Somerset and Weymouth railway, 1 mile SE of Heytesbury r. station.
Traces of another ancient British village are to the N. "The site of these villages," says Sir R.Hoare, "is decidedly marked by great cavities and a black soil; and the attentive eye may easily trace out the lines of houses and the streets, or rather the hollow ways, conducting to them.
[11] A monumental inscription at St Margaret's dating from 1592 asks "Of your cheriti praye for ye soule of Iohn Morgan Gentleman and Elinor his wife with all thaire progenitors and all Christians amen".
[14] The benefice was united with Heytesbury-with-Tytherington in 1885,[15] and today the church is served by the Upper Wylye Valley team.