- History of Dorset
Dorset is arural county in south westEngland whosearchaeology documents much of the history of southern England.Pre-Roman
The first known settlement of Dorset was by
Mesolithic hunters, from around 8000 BC. Their populations were small and concentrated along the coast in theIsle of Purbeck ,Weymouth andChesil Beach and along the Stour valley. These populations used tools and fire to clear these areas of some of the nativeoak forest .Dorset's high chalk hills have provided a location for defensive settlements for millennia, with
Neolithic andBronze Age burial mounds on almost every chalk hill in the county, and a number ofIron Age hill fort s, such as Maiden Castle,Badbury Rings andHambledon Hill . The chalk downs would have been deforested in these times, making way for farmland. Many of the hill tops are inaccessible or impractical for farming and there thearchaeology is well preserved; the valleys, which have been used intensively since, do not have a good record of pre-Roman archaeology, though they were certainly also used by the Iron Age peoples.The Iron Age tribe in Dorset were the
Durotriges , "water dwellers", whose main settlement is represented by Maiden Castle. The name could mean that they were seafarers, but is more likely a reference to the marshy valley of the River Frome which they would have farmed.Roman
The Romans landed in Dorset at
Poole Harbour and the Fleet and moved inland, while other groups travelled west fromOld Sarum and Winchester. AtAbbotsbury on the Fleet the Romans quickly took the hill fort,Abbotsbury Castle , bloodlessly before moving on to Maiden Castle. There is some evidence of a struggle at Maiden Castle and Badbury Rings but current opinion amongst archaeologists is that these, andHod Hill , also fell with ease. There is, however, a find of 130 skeletons atSpetisbury which show that the invasion was not entirely peaceful.Dorset has many notable Roman artefacts, [Archaeological finds are conserved in the [http://www.dorset-archaeology.org.uk/ Dorset County Museum, Dorchester] ] particularly around the Roman town Dorchester, where Maiden Castle was taken early in the Roman occupation. In the grounds of the County Council offices is a Roman house with well preserved
mosaic floors and anaqueduct fed by waters of a tributary of theFrome empounded behind an earthen dam, with a covered timber-lined channel of some nine km; the dam gave way and the aqueduct was abandoned unexpectedly early, in the mid-second century. [ [http://www.roseivy.demon.co.uk/aqua/index2.htm Bill Putnam, "The Roman Aqueduct at Dorchester, Dorset"] ] Roman roads radiated from Dorchester, following the tops of the chalk ridges north west toIlchester nearYeovil , and east to Badbury Rings where it forked to Winchester, Bath and a particularly well-preserved route running north east toOld Sarum near Salisbury, as well as tracks to the many small Roman villages around the county. In the Roman era settlements moved from the hill tops to the valleys, with Roman finds, such as the famousHinton St Mary mosaic, being found in thevale s. In the Isle of Purbeck a long-settled Iron Age site at Worth Maltravers was reorganised late in the Roman period to grow grain for the legion, with a grain-parching granary floor heated with ahypocaust . [ [http://www.arch.soton.ac.uk/research/purbeck/ the Purbeck Project: Worth Matravers site] ] By the fourth century the hilltops had been abandoned.Post Roman
In the post Roman period from about 400 AD to 650 AD, the future Dorset was an independent British kingdom. Although there were Jutish and later Saxon people in the Southampton area from the fifth century, the Britons seem to have successfully resisted their expansion into future Dorset for a long period. One of the key battles (
Mount Badon ) between the Britons and Saxons may have been fought at Badbury Rings, though this is disputed. The only historical record of the period,Gildas 's "De excidio Britanniae", may have been written in Dorset. There may have been a Saxon raid atBindon in 614, though the location is not certain.There is a group of Romano-British inscriptions at Wareham.
axon
A large defensive ditch on
Cranborne Chase in the north east of the county,Bokerley Dyke , dated to 367, delayed the Saxon conquest of Dorset, with the Romano-British remaining in Dorset for 200 years after the withdrawal of the Roman legions. The inhospitablecoast line prevented an invasion from the sea. When theRoman road across Cranborne Chase was rebuilt in the sixth century the Saxons advanced into Dorset. The Romano-British retreated, constructing another defence,Combs Ditch , which also fell within a century. It is thought that the Saxons captured east Dorset in the mid-seventh century and west Dorset shortly afterwards, but the details are not known.Dorset was initially part of Saxon Wessex, with the first record of Dorset being in 841.
Coenred , the sub-king of Dorset at the end of the seventh century, was father of KingIne . St Martin's church at Wareham is reputedly the oldest in Dorset but there were many other Saxon foundations includingShaftesbury Abbey andSherborne Monastery. KingEthelred I (866-871) is buried atWimborne , while St Cuthberga, abbess of Wimborne, died in 725. Gillingham is first mentioned in a tenth century charter.Aldhelm was the first bishop of the Diocese of Sherborne, created in 705 AD. This covered the part of Wessex "west of Selwood".In 876 King
Alfred the Great trapped a Danish fleet at Arne then drove it out, 120 ships being wrecked atStudland .Corfe Castle in 978 saw the murder of King Edward II, whose body was taken first to Wareham and then to Shaftesbury.Middle Ages
The
Domesday Book documents many Saxon settlements corresponding to modern towns and villages, mostly in the valleys. There have been few changes to the parishes since the Domesday Book. Over the next few centuries the settlers established the pattern of farmland which prevailed into the nineteenth century, as well as manymonasteries , which were important landowners and centres of power.A number of military events took place in Dorset iduring
The Anarchy of the twelfth century, and this gave rise to the defensive castles atCorfe Castle ,Powerstock , Wareham andShaftesbury . In1348 theBlack Death came toEngland , probably landing inport s along the south coast, includingWeymouth , which was one of the first towns to experience the epidemic. In the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries the hilltop villages shrank further, and many disappeared altogether.Throughout the Medieval period, Dorset was popular amongst the
nobility , including a number of kings, for itshunting estates, such as Gillingham and Sherborne. A number of deer parks still remain in the county.Early Modern
From the Tudor to Georgian periods farming specialised and the monastic estates broke up, leading to an increase in population and settlement size. The
Dissolution of the Monasteries closed the abbeys at Sherborne, Shaftesbury, Milton Abbas, Abbotsbury andCerne Abbas , though both Sherborne and Milton abbeys were saved from destruction.In the seventeenth-century
English Civil War Dorset had a number of royalist strongholds, such asSherborne Castle and Corfe Castle, which were ruined in the war.Modern
The
industrial revolution largely by-passed Dorset, which has remained largely rural. The farming economy, however, provided the spark for theTrade Union movement when, in the1820s a group of farm labourers formed one of the first unions. In1832 unions were outlawed and the six men, now known as theTolpuddle Martyrs , were transported, becoming national heroes to theworking class es.In the
19th century the railways bought increased mobility and communications to the British people. Lines through Dorset include theSouth Western Main Line , fromLondon toBournemouth ,Poole , Dorchester andWeymouth ; theHeart of Wessex Line fromBristol toSherborne , Dorchester and Weymouth; theWest of England Main Line from London toExeter , with stations at Sherborne and Gillingham; and the now dismantledSomerset and Dorset Joint Railway from Bath to Bournemouth. There were also a number of small branchlines, closed in theBeeching axe , such as those toBridport andSwanage . TheSwanage Railway has been reopened as aheritage railway .During
World War I and II Dorset, located on theEnglish Channel , was both a target and important to theRoyal Navy . The largePortland Harbour , built at the end of the19th century and protected byNothe Fort and theVerne Citadel , was for many years, including during the wars, one of the largest Royal Navy bases. British, American and Canadian ships gathered in the harbour and nearby inWeymouth bay before theD-Day landings. Training for the landings also took place in Dorset, at the long sandy beach atStudland . Portland Harbour continued to be used as a Royal Navy and NATO training base until the 1990s. It is now a civilian port and recreation area which will be used for the sailing events in the 2012 Olympic Games.Since the early
19th century , when George III took holidays in Weymouth while ill, Dorset'stourism industry has grown, with the seaside resorts ofBournemouth and Weymouth, theJurassic Coast and the county's sparsely populated rural areas attracting millions of visitors each year. With farming declining across the country tourism now rivals agriculture as the main economy of the county.In
1974 the political boundaries of Dorset were modified, incorporating a small area of south westHampshire which included the towns ofBournemouth and Christchurch. In1996 Bournemouth and Poole became administratively independent from the county.ee also
*
History of England References
* Cochrane, C., 1969. "Poole Bay and the Purbeck, 300BC-1660AD". Dorchester: Longman.
* Taylor, Christopher, 1970. "The making of the Dorset landscape". London: Hodder & Stoughton.
* Hutchins, John, 1741 (First Edition). "History and Antiquities of Dorset". Third edition reprinted 1973.External links
* [http://www.dorsetcountymuseum.org/research/ Dorset Natural History and Archaeological Society]
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