Warwick
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Warwick | |
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Warwick shown within Warwickshire |
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| Population | 25,434 |
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| OS grid reference | |
| Parish | Warwick |
| District | Warwick |
| Shire county | Warwickshire |
| Region | West Midlands |
| Constituent country | England |
| Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
| Post town | WARWICK |
| Postcode district | CV34 CV35 |
| Dialling code | +44(0)1926 |
| Police | Warwickshire |
| Fire | Warwickshire |
| Ambulance | West Midlands |
| UK Parliament | Warwick and Leamington |
| European Parliament | West Midlands |
| List of places: UK • England • Warwickshire | |
Warwick (pronounced IPA: /ˈwɒrɪk/ or War-ick (silent w in middle)) listen is the historic county town of Warwickshire in England and has a population of 25,434 (2001 census). The town lies upon the River Avon and is located 18 km (11 miles) south of Coventry and 4 km (2.5 miles) west of Leamington Spa.
Warwick has many specialist independent shops, restaurants, pubs and accommodation. It is spared the blight of multinational businesses and retains a wonderful individual charm. There are internationally renowned annual festivals ranging from the Spoken Word to Classical and Contemporary Music to a Folk Festival and the Victorian Evening, held in late November or early December. Warwick Chamber of Trade helps to promote the town for visitors, residents and businesses.
The town is also famous for Warwick Castle, the construction of which began in 1068, which attracts huge numbers of tourists from around the world[citation needed]. The town centre is also known for its historic architecture, and contains a mixture of Tudor and 17th-century buildings.
Warwick School is an independent school for boys which claims to be the oldest boys' school in England. The actual date of its founding is unknown, although 914 has been quoted in some cases. For some years the school honoured the fact that King Edward the Confessor (c.1004–1066) chartered it, although there is no direct evidence for this, and King Henry VIII re-founded the school in 1545. Whatever the truth of the matter, there is no doubt that there has been a grammar school in the town of Warwick since before the Norman Conquest, and its successor, the present school, has been on its current site south of the River Avon since 1879. On 28 March 2007, the Warwick School Under 18s Rugby Union team beat Barnard Castle School 24-23 at Twickenham Stadium, to win the Daily Mail Cup for the first time in the school's history.
Warwick School is part of the Warwick Schools Foundation along with The King's High School For Girls and Warwick Preparatory School. Other secondary schools in Warwick include Myton School and Aylesford school, both state run co-ed.
The University of Warwick, one of the leading universities in the UK, is somewhat confusingly named after the 'county' of Warwickshire, rather than the town, and is in fact situated several miles north on the southern outskirts of Coventry.
Warwick is also known for Warwick Racecourse, near the west gate of the medieval town which hosts several televised meets a year. Within the racecourse is a small golfcourse. Warwick Hospital and St Michael's psychiatric hospital (which replaced Central Hospital, Hatton are in the middle of the town.
Warwick is twinned with Saumur in France and Verden in Germany. Warwick was twinned with Saumur in 1976. Verden, already the twin town of Saumur, became Warwick's German partner in 1989. Havelberg, in former East Germany was adopted by Verden on re-unification, and was welcomed as a friendship town by Warwick and Saumur.
In recent years, several high-profile national and international companies have set-up large office complexes in and around Warwick, notably National Grid and IBM.
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According to tradition, Warwick was founded on the banks of the River Avon in the year 914 AD, when Ethelfleda, sister of Mercian king Edward the Elder built defences against Danish (Viking) invaders; these were to be the basis of Warwick Castle. The name 'Warwick' means "dwellings by the weir".
In 1016 the Danes invaded Mercia and burned down much of Warwick, including the nunnery (which stood on the site of the present day St Nicholas Church).
Its fortifications led Warwick to become an important administrative centre within the Mercian kingdom. In the early 11th century Anglo-Saxon England was divided into administrative areas known as shires, and the shire administered from Warwick became known as Warwickshire. By the time of Domesday Book, Warwick was a royal borough.
In medieval times, Warwick remained under the control of various Earls of Warwick, mostly of the Beauchamp family, and became a walled town. Today the only remains of the town walls are the east and west gatehouses. The Eastern gatehouse now serves as part of the King's High School, a sister institution to Warwick School. Warwick was not incorporated as a town until 1545.
During the English Civil War the town and castle were garrisoned for Parliament. The garrison, under Sir Edward Peyto, withstanding a two week siege by the Royalists. Later musters from 1644 to 1646 record a garrison of up to 350 men under the command of Colonel Purefoy and Major John Bridges. The middle of the 17th century also saw the founding of Castle Hill Baptist Church, one of the oldest baptist churches in the world. In 1694 a great fire destroyed much of the town, and as a result most of the buildings in the town centre are of 17th and 18th century origin, although a number of older medieval buildings survive, especially around the edges of the town centre.
The fire burnt down much of the medieval church of St Mary; both the chancel and the Beauchamp Chapel, however, survived, the latter having been built between 1443 and 1464 according to the wishes of Richard Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick (who had died in Rouen in 1439). A full size reclining copper gilt effigy of the Earl lies upon his Purbeck marble tomb - a fine piece of medieval metalwork cast in 1459.
Warwick is near the M40 motorway and the A46 trunk road. The town also has good rail links, with direct services to London, Birmingham and Stratford-upon-Avon provided by Chiltern Railways from Warwick Station in the town and also from Warwick Parkway, a new out-of-town station opened in 2000 a few miles from the town. In addition, a few peak-hour trains to and from Birmingham are operated by London Midland. The Grand Union Canal and the River Avon also pass through the town. The restored Saltisford Canal Arm, is close to the town centre, and is a short branch of the Grand Union Canal. The arm is the remains of the original terminus of the Warwick and Birmingham Canal and dates back to 1799. The Saltisford Canal Trust have restored most of the surviving canal, which is now the mooring for colourful narrowboats and a waterside park open to the public. Over 800 visiting narrowboats come by water to Warwick each year and moor on the arm.
Population growth has led to Warwick becoming joined to its larger neighbouring town Leamington Spa with which it forms a small conurbation. Both towns are now administered as part of the Warwick District, which has its headquarters in Leamington, although each retains a separate town council. Warwickshire County Council remains based in Warwick itself.
J. R. R. Tolkien seems to have been very influenced by Warwick (where he was married in the Catholic Church of Saint Mary Immaculate) and by its Mercian connections: Lynn Forest-Hill, in an article in the Times Literary Supplement (TLS 8 July 2005 pp 12-13) argues cogently that two important settlements in Tolkien's work were modelled on Warwick — Edoras closely on the early town, and Minas Tirith more remotely on the Norman; and that aspects of the plot of the The Lord of the Rings are paralleled in the romance known as Guy of Warwick.
Warwick and its historic buildings have featured in a number of television series, including the BBC's drama series Dangerfield, the period dramas Pride and Prejudice and Tom Jones and Granada Television's Moll Flanders. Parts of the town subbed for Elizabethan London in the third-series episode two (The Shakespeare Code) of Doctor Who which ran 7 April 2007.
Warwick has many long established sports clubs including Warwick Hockey Club which was founded in 1920 and Racing Club Warwick F.C. founded a year earlier.
Some Warwick lineage still exists in the USA, including Warwicks in Rhode Island, Vermont and Georgia[citation needed].
Suburbs of Warwick include :-
Emscote, Woodloes Park, The Cape, Packmores, Bridge End, Myton (connecting Warwick with Leamington Spa) and Forbes.
- Warwick Castle
- Lord Leycester hospital
- Warwick Hospital, Lakin Road
- Lord Leycester hotel
- The Warwickshire Museum
- Collegiate Church of St Mary
Warwick, Rhode Island
Saumur, Pays de la Loire
Verden, Lower Saxony
Warwick, New York
Warwick, Queensland
- Edgar Broughton Band (Rock Band)
- John Fairfax (Journalist)
- Margaret Harrington (Politician in Canada)
- Sir John Hicks (Nobel Prize in Economics)
- Walter Savage Landor Poet
- June Tabor (Folk Singer)
- Warwick Chamber of Trade — An invaluable reference to the unspoilt town of Warwick
- Warwickshire's Railways — the history of the county's railways from 1838 to 1968
- Warwick Town Council
- A collection of photographs of Warwick
- Views of Warwick in Old Postcards
- Warwick Pageant 1906
- Saltisford Canal Trust: Warwick's local waterway charity
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Warwick Leamington Spa |
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| Boroughs or districts | Borough of North Warwickshire • Borough of Nuneaton and Bedworth • Borough of Rugby • District of Stratford-on-Avon • District of Warwick |
| Cities and towns | Alcester • Atherstone • Bedworth • Coleshill • Henley-in-Arden • Kenilworth • Leamington Spa • Nuneaton • Rugby • Shipston-on-Stour • Southam • Warwick • Whitnash See also: List of civil parishes in Warwickshire |
| Rivers | Alne • Anker • Arrow • Avon • Cole • Dene • Itchen • Leam • Rea • Sherbourne • Sowe • Stour • Tame • |
| Topics | History • Parliamentary constituencies • Places |