Online Encyclopedia

CRICKLADE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 447 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

CRICKLADE  , a

market
See also:
town in the Cricklade
See also:
parliamentary division of Wiltshire, England, 9 m . N.W. of
See also:
Swindon, on the Midland & South-Western Junction railway . Pop . (19o1) 1517 . It is pleasantly situated in the plain which
See also:
borders the south
See also:
bank of the
See also:
Thames, not far from the Thames & Severn Canal . The cruciform church of St Sampson is mainly Perpendicular, with a
See also:
fine ornate tower, and an old rood-stone in its churchyard . The small church of St Mary has an Early
See also:
English tower, Perpendicular aisles and a Norman chancel-arch . There is some agricultural trade . Legend makes Cricklade the abode of a school of Greek philosophers before the
See also:
Roman
See also:
conquest, and the name is given as " Greeklade " in Drayton's Polyolbion . It owed its importance in Saxon times to its position at the passage of the Thames . During the revolt of lEthelwald the 7Etheling in 905 he and his army " harried all the Mercian's
See also:
land until they came to Cricklade and there they went over the Thames " (Anglo-Sax . Chron. sub anno), and in 1016 Canute came with his army over the Thames into
See also:
Mercia at Cricklade (ibid.) .

There was a

mint at Cricklade in the time of
See also:
Edward the
See also:
Confessor and William I., and William of Dover fortified a castle here in the reign of Stephen . In the reign of Henry III. a hospital dedicated to St John the Baptist was founded at Cricklade, and placed under the government of a
See also:
warden or prior . Cricklade was a borough by
See also:
prescription at least as early as the Domesday Survey, and returned two members to parliament from 1295 until disfranchised by the Redistribution Act of 1885 . The borough was never incorporated, but certain liberties, including exemption from toll and passage, were granted to the townsmen by Henry III. and confirmed by successive sovereigns . In 1257 Baldwin de Insula obtained a grant of a
See also:
Thursday market, and an
See also:
annual three days'
See also:
fair at the feast of St Peter ad Vincula . The market was subsequently changed to Saturday, and was much frequented by dealers in corn and cattle, but is now inconsiderable . During the 14th century Cricklade formed
See also:
part of the dowry of the queens of England . In the reign of Henry VI. the lordship was acquired by the Hungerford
See also:
family, and in 1427
See also:
Sir Walter Hungerford granted the reversion of the
See also:
manor to the dean and chapter of Salisbury
See also:
cathedral to aid towards the repair of their belfry .

End of Article: CRICKLADE
[back]
CRICKHOWELL
[next]
CRIEFF

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.