User:Ykraps/History of Dorset

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The first human visitors to Dorset were Mesolithic hunters, from around 8000 BC.[1] The first permanent settlers appeared around 3000 BC[2] and their populations were small and concentrated along the coast in the Isle of Purbeck, the Isle of Portland, Weymouth and Chesil Beach and along the Stour valley.[1][3] These populations used tools and fire to clear these areas of some of the native Oak forest.[3] Dorset's high chalk hills have provided a location for defensive settlements for millennia. There are Neolithic and Bronze Age burial mounds on almost every chalk hill in the county along with a number of Iron Age hill forts.[4] Probably the most famous of these structures, Maiden Castle was built around 600BC and is one of the largest in Europe.[5][6]

The chalk downs would have been deforested in the Iron Age, making way for agriculture and animal husbandry.[7]

Dorset has Roman artefacts, particularly around the Roman town Dorchester, where Maiden Castle was captured from the Celtic Durotriges by a Roman Legion in 43 AD under the command of Vespasian, early in the Roman occupation.[8][9] Roman roads radiated from Dorchester and from the hillfort at Badbury, following the tops of the chalk ridges to the many small Roman villages around the county.[10] The Romans also had a presence on the Isle of Portland, constructing - or adapting - hilltop defensive earthworks on Verne Hill.[11] A large defensive ditch, Bokerley Dyke, delayed the Saxon conquest of Dorset for up to 150 years.[12]By the end of the 7th century however, Dorset had become part of the Saxon kingdom of Wessex.[13][14] The Domesday Book documents many Saxon settlements corresponding to modern towns and villages and there have been few changes to the parishes since.[13][15] Over the next few centuries the settlers established the pattern of farmland which prevailed into the nineteenth century.[5][16] Many monasteries were also established, which were important landowners and centres of power.[17]

In the 12th-century civil war, Dorset was fortified by the construction of the defensive castles at Corfe Castle, Powerstock, Wareham and Shaftesbury, and the strengthening of the monasteries such as at Abbotsbury.[18] The 12th and 13th centuries saw much prosperity in Dorset and the population grew substantially as a result.[19] In order to provide the extra food required, additional land was enclosed for farming during this time.[19] Purbeck Marble, a limestone that can be polished, brought wealth into the county and provided employment for stonecutters and masons. The trade continued until the 15th century when alabaster from Derbyshire became popular.[20] During the Middle Ages, Dorset was used by the monarchy and nobility for hunting and the county still retains a number of Deer Parks.[21][22]

The Tudor period and the dissolution of the monastries saw the end of many of Dorset's abbeys including Shaftesbury, Cerne and Milton.[23] In 1588, eight ships from Dorset assisted in the destruction of the Spanish Armada.[24] The flagship San Salvador still lies at the bottom of Studland bay.[24] Sir Walter Raleigh later settled in Sherborne and served as MP for Dorset.[25]

In the 17th-century English Civil War, Dorset had a number of royalist strongholds, such as Portland Castle, Sherborne Castle and Corfe Castle,[26] the latter two being ruined by Parliamentarian forces in the war.[27]In 1685, James Scott Monmouth, the illegitimate son of Charles II, and 150 supporters landed at Lyme Regis. [28] After the failed Monmouth Rebellion, the 'Bloody Assizes' took place in Dorchester where over a five day period, Judge Jeffreys presided over 312 cases. 74 were executed; 29 were hanged, drawn and quartered; 175 were deported and many were publicly whipped.[29] In 1686, at Charborough Park, a meeting took place to plot the downfall of James II of England. This meeting was effectively the start of the Glorious Revolution.[30]

During the 18th century the Dorset coast saw much smuggling activity; its coves, caves and sandy beaches provided ample opportunities to slip smuggled goods ashore.[31] The production of cloth was a profitable business in Dorset during the 17th and 18th centuries.[32] The absence of coal however meant that during the Industrial Revolution Dorset was unable to compete and so remained largely rural.[33][34][35] The Tolpuddle Martyrs lived in Dorset, and the farming economy of Dorset was central in the formation of the trade union movement.[36]

During World War I and II Dorset, located on the English Channel, was important to the Royal Navy. Portland Harbour, was for many years, the largest man-made harbour in the world and one of the largest Royal Navy bases.[37] Portland, Weymouth and Poole harbours were the main embarkation points on D-Day.[38]Training for the landings also took place in Dorset, on the long sandy beach at Studland which was chosen because of its similarities to the beaches of Northern France.[39]

Since the early 19th century, when George III took holidays in Weymouth, Dorset's tourism industry has grown, with the seaside resorts of Bournemouth and Weymouth, the Jurassic Coast and the county's sparsely populated rural areas, attracting millions of visitors each year.[40][41] With farming declining across the country tourism now rivals agriculture as the main economy of the county.[34] [42][41]

Cut pieces[edit]

  • Large amounts of the stone were used in the construction of Salisbury Cathedral.[20] Another mediaeval industry, which continues today, was the manufacture of rope.[20]
  • This meeting was effectively the start of the Glorious Revolution and a plaque above the ice-house door where it took place commemorates the event.[45]
  • In 1747 a notorious gang of armed smugglers broke into the customs house in Poole to reclaim their captured contraband.[46][47]
  • Blandford became famous for its bonelace and Stalbridge for its stockings. Shaftsbury, Sturminster Marshall, Beamister, Burton Bradstock, Gillingham, Cerne Abbas and Winterbourne Stickland produced a wide variety of materials between them, including sailcloth, linen and even silk.[48]
  • In the Roman era, settlements moved from the hill tops to the valleys, and the hilltops had been abandoned by the fourth century.[citation needed]
  • The earliest recorded use of the name was in AD 940 as Dorseteschire, meaning the dwellers (saete) of 'Dornuuarana' (Dorchester).[citation needed]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Cullingford (p.13)
  2. ^ Cullingford (p.14)
  3. ^ a b "Cultural History". Dorset for You. Dorset County Council. Retrieved 24 February 2011.
  4. ^ Cullingford (pp.15&16)
  5. ^ a b Cullingford (p.16)
  6. ^ "Maiden Castle". Pastscape - National monuments Records. English Heritage. 2007. Retrieved 12 February 2011.
  7. ^ "About Dorset's Heaths". Dorset for You. Dorset County Council. Retrieved 24 February 2011.
  8. ^ Cullingford (p.18)
  9. ^ "Vespasian (9 AD - 79 AD)". British Broadcasting Corporation. 2007. Retrieved 2008-02-04.
  10. ^ Cullingford (p.22-23)
  11. ^ "Portland, an Illustrated History"; Stuart Morris ISBN 0-946159-34-3
  12. ^ Cullingford (pp.23-24)
  13. ^ a b Draper (p142)
  14. ^ The New Illustrated British History. Prof. Eric J. Evans (editor). London: Starfire. p. 192. ISBN 1 903817 24 2. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |titlelink1= (help)CS1 maint: others (link)
  15. ^ Cullingford (p.41-43)
  16. ^ Cullingford (p.47)
  17. ^ Cullingford (p.46-47)
  18. ^ Cullingford (p.43)
  19. ^ a b Cullingford (p48)
  20. ^ a b c Cullingford (p49)
  21. ^ "Things to see, do, hear and discover". Dorset for You. Dorset County Council. Retrieved 4 March 2011.
  22. ^ Cullingford (p.86)
  23. ^ Cullingford (p55)
  24. ^ a b Cullingford (p58)
  25. ^ Cullingford (p59)
  26. ^ Cullingford (p.62)
  27. ^ Cullingford (p.63)
  28. ^ The New Illustrated British History. Prof. Eric J. Evans (editor). London: Starfire. p. 142. ISBN 1 903817 24 2. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |titlelink1= (help)CS1 maint: others (link)
  29. ^ Cullingford (p71)
  30. ^ Cullingford (p72)
  31. ^ Cullingford (pp.87-88)
  32. ^ Cullingford (p.91)
  33. ^ Cullingford (pp.91-92)
  34. ^ a b Draper (p143)
  35. ^ "Agriculture and Land Use". A Vision of Britain Through Time. Portsmouth University. Retrieved 08 March 2011. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  36. ^ Cullingford (pp.114-116)
  37. ^ "Local History - Dorset". BBC. Retrieved 1 April 2011.
  38. ^ Cullingford (p.120)
  39. ^ "BBC Local - Dorset". BBC. Retrieved 1 April 2011.
  40. ^ Cullingford (p.92)
  41. ^ a b Dorset For You. "Tourism in Dorset". Dorset County Council. Retrieved 1 April 2011.
  42. ^ "Dorset Census Information Leaflet" (PDF). Dorset County Council. 2011. p. 3. Retrieved 1 April 2011.
  43. ^ Cullingford (p81)
  44. ^ Cullingford (p86)
  45. ^ Cullingford (p72)
  46. ^ Cullingford (p88)
  47. ^ Richard Platt (2009). "The Smugglers' Guide Book: Southern England - New Forest, Bournemouth, Poole". Smuggler's Britain. Retrieved 23 November 2010.
  48. ^ Cullingford (p.91)

Bibliography[edit]

Draper, Jo (2003). Dorset; The Complete Guide. Wimborne, Dorset: Dovecote Press Ltd. ISBN 0 946159 40 8. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)