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WIMBORNE (WIMBORNE MINSTER)

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Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 701 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WIMBORNE (WIMBORNE MINSTER)  , a market
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town, in the eastern
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parliamentary division of Dorsetshire, England, 1111 m . S.W. by W. from
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London by the London & South-Western railway; served also by the Somerset and Dorset railway . Pop. of urban
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district (1901) 3696 . It is situated on a gentle slope above the
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river Allen near its confluence with the
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Stour . The church or minster of St Cuthberga is a
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fine cruciform structure of various styles from Early Norman to Perpendicular, and consists of a central lantern tower,
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nave and choir with aisles, transepts without aisles, western or bell tower, north and south porches, crypt and vestry or sacristy, with the library over it . It contains a large number of interesting monuments, including a brass with the date 87,3 (supposed to mark the resting-place of King '
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Ethelred I.), a lunar orrery of the 14th century and an octagonal Norman font of Purbeck marble . There is a church dedicated to St John the Evangelist . The
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free grammar school occupies
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modern buildings in the Elizabethan style . Near Wimborne is Canford
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Manor, the seat of Lord Wimborne, a mansion in the Tudor style, built by Blore in 1826, and improved from designs of
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Sir Charles Barry . The town depends chiefly on agriculture; but the manufacture of hose is carried on to a small extent, and there are also coachbuilding
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works . Although Wimborne (Wimburn) has been identified with the Vindogladia of the Antonine Itinerary, the first undoubted evidence of settlement is the entry of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, under the date 718, that Cuthburh,
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sister of King
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Ine, founded the abbey here and became the first abbess; the house is also mentioned in a somewhat doubtful
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epistle of St Aldhelm in 705 . The importance of the foundation made it the
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burial-place of King 'Ethelred in 871, and of King Sifferth in 962 .

'Ethelwald seized and fortified Wimborne in his revolt in 9o1 against

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Edward the Elder . The early abbey was probably destroyed by the Danes in the reign of 'Ethelred the Unready (978-1015), for in 1043 Edward the
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Confessor founded here a college of secular canons . The college remained unaltered until 1496, when Margaret, countess of Richmond, obtained letters patent from her son, Henry VII., to found a chantry, in connexion with which she established a school . The continuance of this was recommended by the commissioners of 1547, and in 1562 Elizabeth vested a
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great
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part of the
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property of the former college in a school corporation of twelve
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governors, who had charge of the church . New charters for the school were obtained from Tames I. in 1562 and from Charles I . At the
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conquest Wimbornewas a royal borough, ancient demesne of the
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crown, and part of the manor of Kingston Lacy, which Henry I. gave to Robert Mellent,
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earl of Leicester . From him it descended by
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marriage to the earls of Lincoln, and, then passing by marriage to Earl Thomas of Lancaster, it became parcel of the county and later of the duchy of Lancaster; an inquisition of 1352 found that Henry, duke of Lancaster, had 77s . 3d.
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rent of
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assize in the borough of Wimborne . The borough is again mentioned in 1487-1488, when John Plecy held six messuages in free burgage of the king as of his borough of Wimborne, but it seems to have been entirely prescriptive, and was never a parliamentary borough . The town was governed until the 19th century by two bailiffs, chosen annually at a court leet of the royal manor of Wimborne borough, part of the manor of Kingston Lacy . The market held here on Friday of each week is not mentioned in Domesday
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Book, but seems to be of early origin . Wimborne carried on considerable manufactures of
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linen and woollen goods until the time of Charles II., when they declined, their place being taken by the stocking-knitting industry of the 18th century .

See John Hutchins, The

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History and Antiquities of the County of Dorset (3rd edition, Westminster, 1861); Anon., History of Wimborne Minster (London, 186o) .

End of Article: WIMBORNE (WIMBORNE MINSTER)
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