FILLONGLEY, a parish in the Atherstone division of the hundred of HEMLINGFORD, county of WARWICK, 6 miles (N. W. by N.) from Coventry, containing 98 inhabitants. The living is a discharged vicarage, in the archdeaconry of Coventry, and diocese of Lichfield and: Coventry, rated in the king's books at £ 8. 9. 9., and in the patronage of the Crown. The church is dedicated to St. Mary and All Saints; to the southward of it are the ruins of an ancient castle, and on the north-east, the area and mounds of another, called Castle hills, are still visible. There is a free school for all the children of the parish, founded by Richard Walker, and endowed with a farm-house and twenty-nine acres of land, the rent of which is equally divided between the master and mistress. William Avery, in 1732, left certain houses and lands, from the proceeds of which £ 10 a year is paid for teaching ten boys, and £10 for clothing them in blue; and Ayliffe Green bequeathed a house with thirty-one acres of land for similar purposes, the boys to be dressed in green. Several fine trout streams have their sources in the parish.