- Brougham, Cumbria
Brougham (pronounced "Broom") is a small village (or more properly a collection of hamlets) - and a
civil parish on the outskirts of Penrith in the Eden district ofCumbria ,England . According to the 2001 census the parish had a population of 279.Within the parish are the ruins of the medieval
Brougham Castle once home toLady Anne Clifford and the mainly 19th centuryBrougham Hall the former seat of the Lords Brougham and Vaux. Near the castle is theCountess Pillar .The parish has two (Anglican) churches. The historicNinekirks , dedicated toSt Ninian , is situated by the banks of theRiver Eamont and was extensively rebuilt by Lady Anne Clifford; but was a Norman foundation, probably on the site of an earlier Anglo-Saxon church. There is reputed to have been an even more ancient monastery nearby, founded bySt Ninian (see alsoHistory of Cumbria ). [ [http://www.visitcumbria.com/pen/chp41.htm Brougham - St Ninian's Church ] ] St Wilfred's or Brougham Chapel is next to the hall, overlooking theRiver Lowther .Brougham "village" itself is no more than a scattering of farms and modern housing near the hall and is, along with neighbouring
Eamont Bridge , often classed as an outlying suburb of Penrith. There are some more cottages next to the castle, which is partially built on the site of the Roman fort of Brocavum.Within the parish is
Whinfell Forest the site of theCenter Parcs Oasis Holiday Village.External Links & References
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