Warwickshire
Warwickshire is a landlocked County in central England. The County has a population of around 500,000, and covers 489.405 acres (198,055 hectares) The county town is Warwick.
Famous people from Warwickshire include: William Shakespeare, from Stratford-upon-Avon, George Eliot from near Nuneaton. and Rupert Brooke from Rugby.
The County of Warwickshire includes the cities of Birmingham and Coventry, although since 1974 these have been administered as part of the administrative metropolitan area of the West Midlands.
Due to this administrative boundary change, administrative warwickshire has a rather odd shape, looking a bit like a large chunk has been bitten out of it where Coventry is.
Towns and villages of Warwickshire
- Atherstone
- Alcester
- Bedworth
- Birmingham
- Brandon
- Coleshill
- Coventry
- Henley-in-Arden
- Kenilworth
- Leamington Spa
- Marlcliff,
- Marston,
- Marston Doles,
- Nuneaton
- Napton-on-the-Hill
- Polesworth
- Rugby
- Shipston-on-Stour
- Southam
- Stratford-upon-Avon
- Warwick
Places of interest
Warwickshire is bounded to the north west by Staffordshire, east by Leicestershire and Northamptonshire, south by Oxfordshire and Gloucestershire, and West by Worcestershire. With the local government reorganisation of 1974, administrative boundaries were redrawn with the formation of the West Midlands metropolitan area to the northwest of administrative warwickshire.
The bulk of Warwickshire's population is in the north and west of the county, The north of the county has traditionally been industrial, with industrial towns such as Nuneaton, Bedworth and Rugby, whose traditional industries included coalmining, textiles, cement and engineering.
The west of Warwickshire includes the prosperous towns of Leamington Spa, Warwick, Kenilworth and Stratford-upon-Avon.
The south of the county is largely rural and sparsely populated, and includes no towns of any significant size.
History
In the 8th and 9th century, what is now Warwickshire was a part of the kingdom of Mercia. In the late 9th century, the Mercian kingdom declined and in 874 large parts of Mercia to the east of Warwickshire were ceeded to Danish invaders by King Alfred's treaty with the Danish leader Guthrum. Watling Street on the eastern edge of Warwickshire became the boundary between the Danelaw (the kingdom of the Danes) to the east and the Mercia to the west. There was also a boundary with the kingdom of Wessex to the south.
Due to its location at the frontier between the two kingdoms, what is now Warwickshire needed to organise defences against Danish invaders. This was done by Ethelfleda "Lady of the Mercians" daughter of King Alfred, who was responsible for the building of the first parts of Warwick Castle at Warwick. Defences against the Danes were also built at Tamworth see Tamworth Castle.
Periodic fighting between Danes and Saxons occured until the 11th century. Because of its castle Warwick grew into a prosperous market town, and a powerful town within the Mercian kingdom. In the early 11th century, new internal boundaries within the Mercian kingdom were drawn and Warwickshire came into being as the land administered from Warwick.
In the English Civil War in the 17th century the Battle of Edgehill (1642) was fought in Warwickshire, near the Oxfordshire border.
The 11th century bondaries of Warwickshire remain unchanged to this day.