Winchester eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 50 pages of information about Winchester.

Winchester eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 50 pages of information about Winchester.

The defeat of the Danish giant is said to have been achieved in a meadow to the north of the city, named from that occurrence “Danemark Mead”; and we are told also that the Dane’s sword was to be seen in the Cathedral treasury down to the reign of James I. Be this as it may, we do know that in the eighth year of Edward I a writ of right was brought by the King against the Abbot of Hyde, to recover land usurped in the north suburb of the city, called “Denemarche”, and judgment was given for the crown.

The appearance of the city in Saxon days has been described thus by Dean Kitchin:  “The three Minsters, which filled up the south-eastern corner of the city, were for long the finest group of churches and dwellings in all England.  Wolvesey Palace, at once the school, the court of justice, and the royal dwelling place, formed the bulwark against the dreaded invasions of the Dane; inwards from Wolvesey precincts came the strong enclosure of St. Swithun’s Convent, a second fortress, which protected the church, and behind both, sheltered by their strong walls and by the river and the marshlands to the north, were the growing buildings of the Nuns’ Minster, and the new Minster.  And up the rising towards the west, on either side of the ancient Roman road from the eastward gate of the city, the houses of the citizens began to cluster into a street, with here and there a stone-built dwelling, and the rest made of that ’wattle and dab’ construction, of which from time to time examples are still laid bare in the city.”

Although many historical persons flit across the scene throughout the centuries, the personal associations of Winchester are dominated by the outstanding figures of Alfred, St. Swithun, and the great clerical craftsman, William of Wykeham, the builder of much of the cathedral, and the founder of St. Mary’s College, Winchester, and New College, Oxford—­the former of which, although of later foundation, was intended as a stepping-stone for the latter.

With the Norman Conquest, and the rapid rise of Westminster, the days of Winchester as the seat of government were numbered, although it was much favoured by the early Norman kings, possibly owing to its proximity to such hunting grounds as the New Forest Cranborne Chase (where King John’s hunting lodge still stands), and the Royal Warren of Purbeck.

William I had his great palace near the cathedral, and it was to Winchester that the body of William Rufus was brought on a cart, after his ill-fated death in the New Forest.

Then the Domesday Book—­if not compiled at Winchester—­was kept there for many years, when it was called “The Book of Winton”.  In the seventh year of Henry II a charge appears in the Pipe Roll for conveying the “arca”, in which the book was kept, from Winchester to London.

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Project Gutenberg
Winchester from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.