- Inglewood Forest
Inglewood Forest is the name now given on maps to a large tract of mainly arable and dairy farm land with a few small woodland areas between
Carlisle and Penrith in the Englishnon-metropolitan county ofCumbria or ancient county ofCumberland .Soon after the
Norman Conquest of England this area became aRoyal Forest . The word forest in this sense did not necessarily mean a wooded area but one that was set aside for hunting though several areas of Inglewood were heavily wooded. The animals that were hunted in this area were mainlydeer and wild boars.Inglewood means the "Wood of the English or Angles" although Cumbria is usually thought of as a
Celt ic region.Angles did migrate here before the Viking Invasions and the rule of the area by the ScottishKingdom of Strathclyde .The forest boundaries changed many times and included at one time most of the Cumberland wards of
Leath and Cumberland but the core or heart of the forest was the parishes of Hesket-in-the-Forest, Skelton andHutton-in-the-Forest .The forest ultimately belonged to the English Crown and was governed by the strict
Forest Law exercised by wardens. In the reign ofHenry VIII the forest laws were repealed and Inglewood ceased to be a Royal Forest although it is still to this day marked on maps as such.The borough and city of Carlisle (ie: the area within the city walls) was outside the forest though Penrith was within it and was the main administrative centre and
market town for the southern part of the region.The manors of Penrith,
Great Salkeld ,Langwathby ,Carlatton (not Carleton as it sometimes said to be),Castle Sowerby and Scotby were collectively known as theHonour of Penrith and were at first given to the Scottish crown in exchange for Scotland given up its claim to all of Cumberland, later Edward I took them for himself. Later they passed to the Neville family but came back to being Crown property during theWars of the Roses and remained so until the joint reign of William III and Mary II. The honour was also known as "The Queen's Hames" due to the fact the manors were often given to aQueen consort on her marriage or at the death of the previous consort. The last Queen consort to be Lady of the Manor or Honour was QueenCatharine of Braganza , consort of Charles II.References
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