Online Encyclopedia

SLEAFORD

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 237 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SLEAFORD  , a

market
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town in the North Kesteven or Sleaford
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parliamentary division of
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Lincolnshire, England, in a fertile and partly fenny
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district on the
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river Slea . Pop. of urban district (19or) 5468 . It is 112 M . N. by W. from
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London by the
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Great
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Northern railway, being the junction for several branch lines and for the March-
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Doncaster joint
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line of the Great Northern and Great Eastern companies . The church of St Denis is one of the finest in the county, exhibiting transitional Norman
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work in the
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base of the western tower, which is crowned by an Early
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English
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spire, which, however, is mainly a copy of the
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original . The
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nave is of beautiful
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late Decorated work with an ornate south porch . There is a splendid carved rood screen of oak . The chancel is Perpendicular . There are a few picturesque old houses . The district is very fertile, and the trade of the town is principally agricultural, while malting is also carried on . The
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discovery of numerous coins of the
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Constantine period, the earthworks of the castle-
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area, and its proximity to the ford by which
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Ermine . Street crossed the
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Witham, point to the probability of Sleaford (Slaforde, Lafford) being on the site of a
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Roman settlement or camp, and that the
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Saxons occupied the site before their conversion to
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Christianity is evident from the large cemetery discovered here .

Domesday

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Book records that the
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manor had been held from the time of
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Edward the
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Confessor by the bishops of Lindsey, whose successors, the bishops of Lincoln, retained it until it was surrendered to the
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Crown in 1546 . It soon after-wards passed to the
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family of Carr and from them, by
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marriage, in 1688 to John Hervey, afterwards
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earl of Bristol . The
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quadrilateral castle, with its square towers and massive keep, was built by Alexander, bishop of Lincoln, and became one of the chief episcopal strongholds . King John rested here in 1216 after his disastrous passage of the
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Wash, and in 1430 Bishop Richard Fleming died here . The castle was in good repair on its surrender in 1546, but was dismantled before 1600 . Sleaford never became a municipal or parliamentary borough, and the government was manorial, the bishops possessing full jurisdiction . The towns-folk were, however, largely organized in the gilds of Corpus Christi, St John and
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Holy Trinity, accounts for which are extant from the
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year 1477 . The origin of the markets and fairs is unknown, but in answer to a writ of quo warranto of the reign of Edward I., the bishop declared that they had been held from time immemorial . See Victoria County
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History, Lincolnshire; G . W . Thomas, " On Excavations in an Anglo-Saxon Cemetery at Sleaford, Lincolnshire," Archaeologia, vol. i . (London, 1887); Edward Trollope, Sleaford and the Wapentakes of Flaxwell and Aswardhurn in the county of Lincoln (London, 1872) .

End of Article: SLEAFORD
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