Online Encyclopedia

CHIPPING CAMPDEN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 238 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHIPPING CAMPDEN  , a

market
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town in the
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northern
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parliamentary division of Gloucestershire, England, on the Oxford and Worcester
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line of the
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Great Western railway . Pop . (1go1) 1542, It is picturesquely situated towards the north of the Cotteswold hill-
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district . The many interesting ancient houses afford evidence of the former greater importance of the town . The church of St James is mainly Perpendicular, and contains a number of brasses of the 15th and 16th centuries and several notable monumental tombs . A ruined
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manor house of the 16th century and some almshouses
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complete, with the church, a picturesque
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group of buildings; and Campden House, also of the 16th century, deserves
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notice . Apart from a
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medieval tradition preserved by Robert de Brunne that it was the meeting-place of a
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conference of Saxon kings, the earliest record of Campden (Campedene) is in Domesday
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Book, when
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Earl
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Hugh is said to hold it, and to have there fifty villeins . The number shows that a large
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village was attached to the manor, which in 1173 passed to Hugh de Gondeville, and about 1204 to Ralph, earl of Chester . The borough must have grown up during the 12th century, for both these lords granted the burgesses charters which are known from a confirmation of 1247, granting that they and all who should come to the market of Campedene should be quit of toll, and that if any
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free burgess of Campedene should come into the lord's amerciament he should be quit for 12d. unless he should
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shed
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blood or do felony . Probably Earl Ralph also granted the town a portman-mote, for the account of a skirmish in 1273 between the men of the town and the county mentions a
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bailiff and implies the existence of some sort of municipal government . In 1605 Campedene was incorporated, but it never returned representatives to parliament . Camden speaks of the town as a market famous for stockings, a relic of that medieval importance as a mart for wool that had given the town the name of Chipping .

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