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TEWKESBURY , a marketSee also: town and municipal See also: borough in the Tewkesbury See also: parliamentary division of See also: Gloucestershire, See also: England, 151 M
.
N.E. of See also: Gloucester by the Midland railway
.
Pop
.
(1901) J419
.
It lies in a flat pastoral See also: district, with low hills to the See also: south, on the See also: Warwickshire See also: Avon, close to its junction with the See also: Severn
.
The Severn is crossed by an iron See also: bridge with a flattened See also: arch of 170 ft. span, erected by See also: Telford in 1824
.
Of the See also: great See also: Benedictine abbey, one of the richest See also: foundations in England, refounded and enlarged by See also: Sir Robert Fitz-See also: Hamon in the 12th century on the site of an See also: ancient hermitage and Saxon monastery, there only remain the See also: gate and a few other fragments
.
The abbey See also: church, however, consecrated in 1125, is a magnificent specimen of early Norman
.
This elaborate cruciform
See also: building consists of See also: nave and See also: side aisles, with transepts See also: united by a See also: grand central tower richly arcaded
.
The choir terminates in an apse and is surrounded by an ambulatory
.
One of the most remarkable features of the building is the unique western front, the central See also: part of which is occupied by one vast arch extending from the ground to the roof
.
Originally it was filled in with Norman windows, but a Perpendicular window now occupies the space
.
The whole building under-went restoration in the Decorated See also: period, and of this See also: style it is one of the finest existing examples
.
The Norman windows in the nave were replaced, and See also: stone groining was substituted for the carved wooden ceiling, a like transformation taking place in the transepts
.
The Norman columns in the choir still exist; but above them rises a grand superstructure of Decorated
See also: work
.
The elegant See also: clerestory windows are of the 14th century, with stained See also: glass of the same date
.
The ambulatory was re-built some distance farther out, and from it projected a beautiful series of chapels
.
The elaborate tombs include those of Sir Robert Fitz-Hamon, the De Spensers, Alan See also: prior of See also: Canterbury, Sir See also: Guy de Brien, and the vault of See also: George duke of See also: Clarence (murdered in the Tower) and his wife Isabella
.
See also: Edward, See also: prince of See also: Wales, slain after the See also: battle of Tewkesbury (1471) by the Yorkists, is also buried in the church
.
Of the two See also: organs, one, dating from the early 17th century, is of singularly beautiful See also: tone
.
In the High Street there are several ancient timbered and gabled houses
.
Remains of an ancient See also: wall have been discovered adjoining the town
.
There are a See also: free grammar school (1625) and a number of charities and almshouses
.
Tewkesbury is chiefly dependent on its agricultural See also: trade
.
Below the junction of the See also: rivers there is a great See also: lock and See also: weir on the Severn, up to which the stream is sometimes reversed by the tidal See also: bore
.
The borough is under a mayor, 4 aldermen and 12 councillors
.
See also: Area, 2532 acres
.
Remains of See also: Roman encampments and roads prove that the earliest See also: settlement near Tewkesbury (Theotesburg, Theockesburia, Thooksburi) of which we have evidence was a military encampment against the See also: British
.
It was the site of a Saxon See also: castle and monastery, and its position near navigable rivers led to the growth of a town, which was a borough with a market in 1087 when it was part of the royal domain
.
It was subsequently granted to See also: Earl Robert of Gloucester, who granted a charter before 1107, which exempted the borough from certain tolls and from suit at the See also: hundred See also: court
.
Edward III. See also: con-firmed this charter in 1337, and made Tewkesbury free from tolls throughout England
.
The borough was incorporated by See also: Elizabeth by a charter of 1574, which was confirmed in 1604, 1605, 1609 (when the
See also: manor and borough were sold to the corporation) and 1685, while the town was governed under the charter granted by See also: William III. in 1698 until the corporation was remodelled in 1835, the
See also: modern See also: government consisting of a mayor, 4 aldermen and 12 councillors
.
Tewkesbury returned two members from 1609 to 1867, when it lost one member, and in 1885 the See also: representation was merged in that of the county
.
A See also: fair on See also: July 20 was granted in 1323, and fairs on See also: September 21 and See also: August 24 in 1440, and on See also: April 25 in 1574
.
For the last May 3 was substituted in 1605, and two more fairs on See also: June 11 and September 29 were granted in 1609
.
All these grants were confirmed by the charter of 1685
.
One fair only is now held, on See also: October to
.
It is a pleasure fair and a fair for hiring servants, and has lost the commercial importance of the early wool fairs
.
The long-existing See also: provision trade along the four rivers declined through railway competition
.
See also: Cloth-making lasted from the 11th century until the beginning of the 18th; gloving in the 17th century was followed by worsted-combing in the 18th
.
See also: Cotton-thread lace-making, introduced in 1825, collapsed about 1862
.
Tewkesbury was once celebrated for the manufacture of See also: mustard, which ceased to be important at the end of the 18th century
.
Stocking-See also: frame knitting was the chief trade in 1830, but has been replaced by the See also: boot and shoe trade
.
Tewkesbury was strategically important in the See also: Wars of the See also: Roses, and was the site of a battle in 1471, and in the See also: Civil War was four times besieged
.
See See also: Victoria County See also: History, Gloucestershire; See also: James Bennet, History of Tewkesbury (185o); William Wyde, History of Tewkesbury (1798)
.
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