A History of Wiltshire
XVII: Calne
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Victoria County History
Published:24th Oct '02
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
The history of Calne, a market and industrial town in north Wiltshire, and the places around it. Calne, a small town in north Wiltshire, stood on a large royal estate, and the witan met there - St Dunstan survived the partial collapse of a building at one meeting. It sent members to parliament from the thirteenth century, andit became a pocket borough in the eighteenth. The town stands on what until 1971 was the main London to Bristol road; markets and fairs were held, and inns flourished. It was also industrial: water-powered mills were used for fulling, and from the sixteenth century to the 1840s it was a centre for cloth making. The topography of the town, its growth, government and cultural life are fully explored, and churches, chapels and schools discussed. In Calne's hinterland most settlement was in small villages with open fields and commonable pastures. Bowood park was inclosed from the forest c.1618 and Bowood House was built in the park c.1727. The house, the changes to it by Robert Adam and others, and the redesigning of its park by 'Capability' Brown are fully described. In the nineteenth century many estate cottages were built. For the places around Calne the history of the settlement and churches in each village, the manorial descents, and the evolution of farming and farms are all traced, and there are architectural descriptions of the churches.D.A.CROWLEY is County Editor, Victorial History of Wiltshire.
An interesting volume, with the customary wealth of detailed research and invaluable references. AGRICULTURAL HISTORY REVIEW Along with its fellow VCH volumes, it maintains the gold standard of meticulous and cogently presented once-in-a-lifetime research that will be valued increasingly more, not less, as the years go by. * LANDSCAPE HISTORY *
ISBN: 9781904356011
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 1270g
254 pages