Monday 15 September 2014

One mile southeast of the town is a 10–acre walled


One mile southeast of the town is a 10–acre walled in area called 'The Castle'. The physical remainders on the ground show the past presence of a manor here, in spite of the fact that there are no verifiable records for the site. 

Leigh has a town cross with a pole dating from the fifteenth century. The ward church, committed to St Andrew, was long ago a sanctuary of neighboring Yetminster. It additionally dates from the fifteenth century, however was considerably adjusted including the virtual reconstructing of the chancel—in 1854. 

Leigh is arranged in the Blackmore Vale in the West Dorset authoritative region. Measured specifically, the town is 5 miles (8.0 km) southsouthwest of Sherborne, 6 miles (9.7 km) southeast of Yeovil and 12 miles (19 km) northnorthwest of Dorchester. The encompassing scene is tenderly undulating and dominatingly horticultural. The underlying geography is Oxford dirt which here produces great quality pasture; the town was once known for delivering cheddar and juice, with at one time each ranch having an orchard.

Affidavits from 1650–1664 express that the Miz Maze is the place nearby witches used to meet. In 1879 the Dorset tongue artist William Barnes introduced the Dorset Field Club with a paper in which he composed "Numerous years prior I was told by a man of this area that a corner of Leigh Common was called 'Witches Corner'; and long after that a companion provided for me some old statements on witchcraft ... one of the witches' sisterhood said that they frequently met in Leigh Common." The last witch to be smoldered in England was rumored to have been captured at a meeting here in the seventeenth century and afterward executed at Maumbury Rings in Dorchester. 

There used to be a few of these mazes in Dorset, however this is the stand out where follows still remain, and even here there is little confirmation with the exception of little unsettling influences in the grass surface which might be felt underneath. 

The district has a long history of human settlement extending over to the Neolithic time. The Romans vanquished Dorset's indigenous Celtic tribe, and amid the early Middle Ages, the Saxons settled the zone and made Dorset a shire in the seventh century. The initially recorded Viking strike on the British Isles happened in Dorset amid the eighth century and the dark passing entered England at Melcombe Regis in 1348. Dorset has seen much common turmoil: amid the English Civil War an uprising of vigilantes was pounded by Cromwell's strengths in a pitched fight close Shaftesbury; the Duke of Monmouth's destined defiance started at Lyme Regis; and a gathering of ranch workers from Tolpuddle were instrumental in the creation of the exchange union development. Amid the Second World War, Dorset was vigorously included in the arrangements for the intrusion of Normandy and the huge harbors of Portland and Poole were two of the principle embarkation focuses on D-Day. 

Dorset is generally country with a lot of people little towns, few extensive towns and no cities. The main major urban zone is the South East Dorset conurbation, which is arranged at the south-eastern end of the area and is atypical of the province in general. It comprises of the ocean side resort of Bournemouth, the noteworthy port and district of Poole, the towns of Christchurch and Ferndown in addition to numerous encompassing villages. Bournemouth, the most crowded town in the conurbation, was secured in the Georgian period when ocean washing got to be popular. Poole, the second biggest settlement (once the biggest town in the province), abuts Bournemouth to the west and contains the suburb of Sandbanks which has a percentage of the most noteworthy area values by zone on the planet. 

In the twelfth century Roger de Caen, Bishop of Salisbury and Chancellor of England, manufactured an invigorated royal residence in Sherborne. The royal residence was crushed in 1645 by General Fairfax, and its demolishes are claimed by English Heritage. 

In 1594 Sir Walter Raleigh assembled an Elizabethan manor in the grounds of the old castle, today known as Sherborne Castle. 

Sherborne got to be home to Yorkshireman, Captain Christopher Levett who went to the West Country as His Majesty's Woodward of Somersetshire, and who stayed in Sherborne when he turned to a profession as a maritime chief and early adventurer of New England. 

The Winchester Mizmaze is most curious, being generally square, despite the fact that its ways bend tenderly and it has adjusted corners. It is likewise one of just two surviving noteworthy English turf mazes where the way is a restricted section in the turf (the other is at Saffron Walden, Essex). All the more regularly the turf itself structures the raised way, which is stamped out by shallow channels uncovered between its turns and turns; this is the situation at Breamore, where the mizmaze is round (an adaptation of the medieval maze outline) and encompassed by 

1 comment:

  1. Great photo, really similar to the canal in Leeds I visited in spring

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