Knebworth is a village and civil parish in the north of Hertfordshire, England, immediately southern of Stevenage. The civil parish covers a location between the villages of Datchworth, Woolmer Green, Codicote, Kimpton, Whitwell, St Paul's Walden as well as Langley, and also incorporates the town of Knebworth, the little village of Old Knebworth and Knebworth House. There is evidence of individuals staying in the location as far back as Neolithic times as well as it is discussed in the Domesday Book of 1086 where it is described as Chenepeworde (the farm coming from the Dane, Cnebba) with a population of 150. The initial village, now referred to as Old Knebworth, developed around Knebworth House. Growth of the newer Knebworth town started in the late 19th century centred a mile to the east of Old Knebworth on the new railway station and also the Great North Road (consequently the A1, and now the B197 because the opening of the A1(M) motorway in 1962). At the millenium the engineer Edwin Lutyens built Homewood, southeast of Old Knebworth, as a dower residence for Edith Bulwer-Lytton. Her daughter, the suffragette Constance Lytton also lived there, till right before her death in 1923. Knebworth has, because 1974, been famously related to countless major open air rock and pop concerts at Knebworth House, consisting of Queen's final online performance which occurred on 9 August 1986 as well as drew a presence approximated at 125,000, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Oasis playing to a quarter of a million people for 2 evenings in 1996 and also even more lately Robbie Williams, who for 3 evenings in August 2003 executed to the largest groups ever before put together for a single entertainer. Data from UK Census 2011: All Citizens: 5,247.