Online Encyclopedia

TONBRIDGE [TUNBRIDGE]

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 2 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TONBRIDGE [TUNBRIDGE]  , a market
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town in the Tonbridge or south-western
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parliamentary division of Kent, England, 291 M . S.S.E. of
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London by the South Eastern & Chatham railway . Pop. of urban
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district (1901), 12,736 . It is situated on rising ground above the
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river
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Medway, which is crossed by a stone
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bridge erected in 1775 . The church of St Peter and St Paul, chiefly Decorated and Perpendicular, with some portions of earlier date, was completely restored in 1879 . There are remains of an ancient castle, consisting chiefly of a finely pre-served gateway, of the Early Decorated period, flanked by two round towers . The castle was formerly defended by three moats, one of them formed by the Medway . Tonbridge School was founded by
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Sir Andrew Judd, lord mayor of London in the time of
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Edward VI., and was rebuilt in 1865, remodelled in 188o, and extended subsequently . Ornamental articles of inlaid wood, called Tonbridge
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ware, chiefly sold at Tunbridge Wells, are largely manufactured . There are
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gunpowder mills on the banks of the Medway, and wool-stapling,
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brewing and II tanning are carried on . There is some
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traffic on the Medway, which is navigable for
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barges . Tonbridge owed its early importance to the castle built by Richard,
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earl of Clare, in the reign of Henry I .

The castle was besieged by

William Rufus, was taken by John in the
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wars with the barons, and again by Prince Edward, son of Henry III . After being in the possession of the earls of Clare and Hertford, and of the earls of Gloucester, it became the
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property of the Staffords, and on the attainder of the duke of Bucking-
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ham in the reign of Henry VIII. was taken by the
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Crown . It was dismantled during the
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Civil War . The lords of the castle had the right of attending the archbishops of Canterbury on state occasions as chief butlers .

End of Article: TONBRIDGE [TUNBRIDGE]
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