Online Encyclopedia

ASHFORD

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 732 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ASHFORD  , a

market-
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town in the
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Southern or Ashford
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parliamentary division of Kent, England, 56 m . S.E. of
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London by the South-Eastern & Chatham railway . Pop. of urban
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district (1901) 12,808 . It is pleasantly situated on a gentle eminence near the confluence of the upper branches of the
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river
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Stour . It has a
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fine Perpendicular church dedicated to St Mary, with a lofty, well-proportioned tower and many interesting monuments . The grammar school was founded by
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Sir Norman Knatchbull in the reign of Charles I . Ashford has agricultural implement
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works and breweries; and the large
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locomotive and
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carriage works of the South-Eastern & Chatham railway are here . At Bethersden, between Ashford and Tenterden, marble quarries were formerly worked extensively, supplying material to the cathedrals of Canterbury and Rochester, and to many
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local churches . At Charing, north-west of Ashford, the archbishops of Canterbury had a residence from pre-
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Conquest times, and ruins of a palace, mainly of the Decorated period, remain . On the south-eastern outskirts of Ashford is the populous
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village of Willesborough (3602) . Ashford (Esselesford, Asshatisforde, Essheford) was held at the time of the Domesday survey by
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Hugh de Montfort, who came to England with William the Conqueror . A Saturday market and an
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annual
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fair were granted to the lord of the
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manor by Henry III. in 1243 .

Further annual fairs were granted by

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Edward III. in 1349 and by Edward IV. in 1466 . In 1672 Charles II. granted a market on every second Tuesday, with a court of
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pie-powder . James I. in 1607, at the petition of the inhabitants of Ashford, gave Sir John Smith, Kt., the right of holding a court of record in the town on every third Tuesday . The fertility of the pasture-
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land in Romney Marsh to the south and east of Ashford caused the cattle trade to increase in the latter
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half of the 18th century, and led to the establishment of a stock market in 1784 . The town has never been incorporated . See Edward Hasted,
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History and Survey of Kent (Canterbury, 1778-1799, and ed . 1797–1801); Victoria County History—Kent . 'ASHI (352–427), Jewish 'amora, the first editor of the
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Talmud, was born at Babylon . He was head of the Sura Academy, and there began the Babylonian Talmud, spending
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thirty years of his
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life at it . He
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left the
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work incomplete, and it was finished by his
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disciple Rabina just before the
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year 500 A.D .

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