Lyndhurst is a big village and also civil parish located in the New Forest National Park in Hampshire, England. Working as the management funding of the New Forest, it is a popular tourist attraction, with lots of independent stores, art galleries, cafés, museums, bars as well as hotels. The closest city is Southampton, concerning 9 miles (14 km) to the north-east. As of 2001 Lyndhurst had a population of 2,973, enhancing to 3,029 at the 2011 Census. The name derives from an Old English name, consisting of the words lind (lime tree) and also hyrst (wooded hill). Called the "Capital of the New Forest", Lyndhurst houses the New Forest District Council. The very first reference of Lyndhurst remained in the Domesday Book of 1086 under the name 'Linhest'. The Court of Verderers sits in the Queens House in Lyndhurst. The church of St. Michael and All Angels was constructed in the 1860s, and has a fresco by Lord Leighton and also stained-glass home windows by Charles Kempe, William Morris, Edward Burne-Jones and others; Alice Liddell, the inspiration for Alice in Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, is hidden there. Glasshayes House (the former Lyndhurst Park Hotel) is the only surviving instance of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's building experimentation, and also neighborhood mythology documents Lyndhurst as the site of a Dragon-slaying, and as being haunted by the ghost of Richard Fitzgeorge de Stacpoole, 1st Duc de Stacpoole.