yes
In the book The Last of the Mohicans, Magua entered the village of the Delaware one morning.
It probably was true in the past and even if the law still exists it obviously isn't enforced.
It WAS the law in the later Middle Ages. If the law is still in force, it certainly has not been enforced for many centuries.
It is Britain's highest village
There used to be a law similar to those words - that required men between those ages to practice archery - it was repealed in 1960 when the government of the time decided to 'clean up' some of the archaic laws still on the statute books.
Og in Wiltshire
The longest place name in Great Britain is that of a Welsh village: Gorsafawddachaidraigeddanheddogleddollonpenrhynareurdraethceredigion.
Lancing, in Sussex, population about 11,000.
Pontnewydd is a very good village situated in South Wales, Great Britain. It is the proud owner of the cenotaph and Pontyrhydyrun.
The village of Brill is located in the city of Buckinghamshire in the United Kingdom of Great Britain. This village has a small population, measuring just over one thousand.
Yes, it's a fishing village on Cornwall's north coast.
There are two instances of towns called Yaxley in Great Britain. The first is a small village in the county of Suffolk, and the second is a village in Cambridgeshire.