قراءة كتاب Curiosities of Great Britain: England and Wales Delineated Vol.1-11 Historical, Entertaining & Commercial; Alphabetically Arranged. 11 Volume set.
تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"
Curiosities of Great Britain: England and Wales Delineated Vol.1-11 Historical, Entertaining & Commercial; Alphabetically Arranged. 11 Volume set.
class="sidenote">The witch of Falsehope. Falsehope, who lived on the opposite side of the river, Michael went one morning to put her skill to the test, but was disappointed by her positively denying any knowledge of the necromantic art. In his discourse with her, he laid his wand inadvertently on the table which the hag observing, suddenly snatched it up and struck him with it. Feeling the force of the charm, he rushed out of the house; but as it had conferred on him the external appearance of a hare, his servant, who waited without, hallooed upon the discomfited wizard his own greyhounds, and pursued him so close, that, in order to obtain a moment's breathing to reverse the charm, Michael, after a very fatiguing course, was fain to take refuge in his own common sewer.
Fair, October 29, for horses and horned cattle.
Map | Names of Places | County | Number of Miles From | Dist. Lond. |
Popul ation. |
||||||
16 | Abbots Ann | pa | Hants | Andover | 2 | Salisbury | 16 | Stockbridge | 6 | 66 | 562 |
11 | Abbots Bickington | pa | Devon | Holsworthy | 6 | Torrington | 9 | Hartland | 13 | 220 | 77 |
35 | Abbots Bromley[A] | pa | Stafford | Uttoxeter | 7 | Lichfield | 10 | Stafford | 11 | 1129 | 1621 |
12 | Abbotsbury[B] | pa | Dorset | Dorchester | 10 | Bridport | 10 | Weymouth | 10 | 127 | 874 |
[A] ABBOTS BROMLEY. The hobby-horse dance, an ancient custom, was observed here till the civil war.—Ten or twelve of the dancers carried, on their shoulders, deers' heads, painted with the arms of Paget, Hobby-horse dance Bagot, and Welles, to whom the chief property of the town belonged. The horns yet hang up in the church, but the custom is now discontinued. The parish includes Bromley, Bagot's liberty, and Bromley Hurst township. Bagot's park is the deer-park of Lord Bagot, whose seat is at Blithefield.
Market, Tuesday.—Fairs, Tuesday before Mid-lent Sunday, May 22, September 4, for horses and horned cattle.
[B] ABBOTSBURY consists of a single parish, divided into three streets, nearly in the form of the letter Y, lying in a valley surrounded and protected by bold hills near the sea. There is a tradition that this Tradition of St. Peter place was called Abodesbyry by St. Peter himself, in the infancy of Christianity, but it is more probably supposed to have derived its name from the magnificent abbey, originally founded here, in the early part of the eleventh century. The ruins of the abbey (which was once large and splendid, but is now nearly demolished), consist of a large barn, a A ruined abbey. stable, supposed to have been the dormitory, a porch which belonged to the conventual church, the principal entrance, a portion of the walls, and two buildings conjectured to have been used for domestic purposes. The barn, which, when entire, was the largest in the county, is now so dilapidated, that only a part of it can be used. The church, in which Orcus and his wife, the founders, were buried, is, with the exception of the porch and a pile of ruins under some neighbouring elms, totally destroyed; but the numerous chantries and chapels which belonged to it sufficiently prove its ancient magnificence. On an eminence, at a short distance from the town, stands a small building called St. Catherine's St. Catherine's chapel, a sea mark. Chapel, which is supposed to have been erected about the time of Edward IV., and which from its height and lofty situation, serves both for a sea and land mark. Abbotsbury Church appears to have been built a short time before the reformation; the pulpit is pierced by musket balls, said to have been fired by Cromwell's soldiers, at the officiating minister, whom, however, they missed. But it is more likely to have occurred at the time of Sir Anthony Astley Cooper's attack on the royalists, at the siege of Sir John Strangeway's house, in 1651. About Wild fowl decoy, and swannery. a mile to the south-west of Abbotsbury, is the "decoy," where great quantities of wild fowl are annually taken. But the object which most engages the attention of strangers, in the neighbourhood of this town, is the celebrated "swannery," which, not long since, was the property of the Earl of Ilchester. In the open or broad space of the fleet are kept six or seven hundred swans, formerly one thousand five hundred, including hoppers—a small species of swans, who feed and range, and return home again.
Fair, July 10, for sheep and toys.
Map | Names of Places | County | Number of Miles From | Dist. Lond. |
Popul ation. |
||||||
11 | Abbotsham | m.t.& pa | Devon | Bideford | 2 | Torrington | 7 | Barnstaple | 10 | 204 | 386 |
44 | Abbotside, | H.&Low pa | N.R. York | Askrigg | 0 | Middleham | 7 | Richmond | 12 | 208 | 762 |
34 | Abbotts Isle | pa | Somerset | Ilminster | 4 | Ilchester | 11 | Taunton | 10 | 133 | 380 |
11 | Abbotts Kerswell | pa | Devon | Newton Bush | 2 | Totness | 7 | Torquay | 6 | 189 | 442 |