Monument commémoratif de guerre à Clitheroe une petite ville dans le Nord de l'Angleterre avec un petit château Norman garder dans le centre de la ville
3350 x 5044 px | 28,4 x 42,7 cm | 11,2 x 16,8 inches | 300dpi
Date de la prise de vue:
30 mai 2010
Lieu:
Clitheroe in Lancashire in Northern England
Informations supplémentaires:
Clitheroe is a town and civil parish in the Borough of Ribble Valley in Lancashire, England. It lies on the southern edge of the Forest of Bowland and is often used as a base for tourists in the area. The most notable building in the town is a Norman keep, suggested to be one of the smallest in the country. It has a population of 14, 697.The town elected two members to the Unreformed House of Commons. The Great Reform Act reduced this to one. The place has been claimed to be the most (geographically) central town in Britain, by virtue of its proximity to the village of Dunsop Bridge.The name Clitheroe is thought to come from the Anglo-Saxon for "Rocky Hill", and was also spelled Clyderhow and Cletherwoode. The town was the administrative centre for the Honour of Clitheroe This land was held by Roger de Poitou, who passed it to the De Lacy family from whom it passed in 1311 to Thomas, Earl of Lancaster.Up until 1835, the Lord of the Honour was also by right Lord of Bowland.The town's earliest existing charter is from 1283, granted by Henry de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln and confirming rights granted by one of his forebears between 1147 and 1177.Clitheroe Castle is argued to be the smallest Norman keep in the whole of England. It stands atop a 35-metre outcrop of limestone and is one of the oldest buildings in Lancashire. It is also the only remaining castle in the county which had a royalist garrison during the English Civil War.The castle's most prominent feature is the hole in its side which was made in 1649 as was ordered by the government. It was to be put in "such condition that in might neither be a charge to the Commonwealth to keep it, nor a danger to have it kept against them".