Online Encyclopedia

WAREHAM

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 324 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

WAREHAM  , a

market
See also:
town and municipal borough in the eastern
See also:
parliamentary division of Dorsetshire, England, 1212 M . S.W. by W. from
See also:
London by the London & South-Western railway . Pop . (1901) 2003 . It lies between the rivers
See also:
Frome and Piddle, 12 m. above their outflow into Poole harbour . The town is of high antiquity, and is partially surrounded by earth-
See also:
works probably of
See also:
British construction . The church of St Mary contains a
See also:
chapel dedicated to St
See also:
Edward, commemorating that Edward who was murdered at Corfe Castle in this neighbourhood, whose
See also:
body
See also:
lay here before its removal to Shaftesbury . It also possesses a remarkable Norman font of lead . Two other ancient churches remain, but are not used for worship . There are ruins of a priory dedicated to SS . Mary, Peter and Ethelwold, and the site of the old castle may be traced . The town and neighbourhood have been long noted for their lime and cement, and large quantities of potters',
See also:
pipe, fire and other kinds of clay are sent to
See also:
Staffordshire and to
See also:
foreign countries .

The borough is under a

mayor, 4 aldermen, and 12 councillors .
See also:
Area 251 acres . Owing to its situation as a key of Purbeck, the site of
See also:
Ware-
See also:
ham (Werham, Warham) has been occupied from early times . The earthworks, of British origin, were modified in almost every successive age . That Wareham was a pre-Saxon town is evident from Asser's statement that its British name was Durngueir . The early chroniclers declare that St Aldhelm founded a church near Wareham about 701, and perhaps the pricry, which is mentioned as existing in 876, when the Danes retired from Cambridge to a strong position in this fort . Their occupation was not lengthy . Having made terms with
See also:
Alfred, they broke the conditions and returned to Cambridge . In the following
See also:
year they were again at Wareham, which they made their headquarters . Beorhtric, the immediate predecessor of Ecgbert, was buried here . Further incursions made by the Danes in 998 and in 1015 under Canute probably resulted in the destruction of the priory, on the site of which a later house was founded in the 12th century as a cell of the Norman abbey of Lysa, and in the decayed condition of Wareham in 1o86, when 203 houses were ruined or waste, the result of misfortune, poverty and fire . The early castle, which existed before 1o86, was important during the
See also:
civil
See also:
wars of Stephen's reign; in 1142 Robert,
See also:
earl of Gloucester, on his departure for France, committed it to his son's charge .

Stephen, however, surprised and took it, but it surrendered to the earl in the same year on the

king's refusal to send it aid . John fortified it against Louis of France in 1216, and during the civil wars it was the scene of much fighting, being stormed by the parliamentary forces in 1644 . Wareham was accounted a borough in Domesday
See also:
Book, and the burgesses in 1176 paid 20 marks for a default . In 118o-1181 they rendered account of 5 marks for erecting a gild without licence . The
See also:
fee-
See also:
farm of the borough was obtained in 1211, on a
See also:
fine of
See also:
roc marks . The constitution of Wareham underwent a change during the years 1326-1338, when the governing body of the bailiffs and commonalty were replaced by the mayor and bailiffs . In 158.7 Elizabeth granted certain privileges to Wareham, but it was not incorporated until 1703, when the existing fairs for
See also:
April 6 and August 23 were granted . The
See also:
port was important throughout the
See also:
middle ages, and was required to furnish four
See also:
ships for the French war in 1334 . Considerable trade was carried on with France and Spain,
See also:
cloth, Purbeck stone and, later, clay being largely exported .

End of Article: WAREHAM
[back]
WARE
[next]
EARLS WARENNE

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.