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Carisbrooke

Coordinates: 50°41′30″N 1°19′02″W / 50.6917°N 1.3172°W / 50.6917; -1.3172
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Carisbrooke
Carisbrooke High Street
Carisbrooke is located in Isle of Wight
Carisbrooke
Carisbrooke
Location within the Isle of Wight
Population3,547 (2011, ward)[1]
OS grid referenceSZ483882
Civil parish
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townNewport
Postcode districtPO30
Dialling code01983
PoliceHampshire and Isle of Wight
FireHampshire and Isle of Wight
AmbulanceIsle of Wight
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Isle of Wight
50°41′30″N 1°19′02″W / 50.6917°N 1.3172°W / 50.6917; -1.3172

Carisbrooke is a village on the south-western outskirts of Newport, in the civil parish of Newport and Carisbrooke, Isle of Wight, England.[2] It is best known as the site of Carisbrooke Castle. It also has a medieval parish church, St Mary's Church (overlooking the High Street, with views to the castle), which began as part of a Benedictine priory established by French monks c. 1150. The priory was dissolved by King Henry V of England in 1415, during the Hundred Years' War. In 1907, the church was restored. It has a 14th-century tower rising in five stages with a turret at one corner and a battlemented and pinnacled crown.

A Roman Villa was discovered in the Victorian era on the site of the old vicarage.

Transport

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Carisbrooke is served by Southern Vectis buses operating to Freshwater, Newport, Yarmouth and Ventnor, as well as some smaller villages.[3] It was served by nearby Carisbrooke railway station until the line from Newport to Freshwater closed in 1953. It is the starting point of the Tennyson Trail, leading to Alum Bay and the Needles.

Local amenities

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View of the village from the castle ramparts

Carisbrooke has two pubs – the Waverley and the Eight Bells – a café, an Italian restaurant and a motorcycle dealership. There are several shops on the High Street. The village has four schools, three of which are located along Wellington Road. These are Carisbrooke CE Primary School, Christ the King College (formerly Archbishop King Roman Catholic Middle and Trinity CE Middle Schools) and Carisbrooke College. The fourth school is St Thomas of Canterbury Roman Catholic Primary School, which is on Carisbrooke High Street next to the doctors' surgery. There are allotments next to the ford in Castle Street.

History

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Carisbrooke Church

Carisbrooke was for centuries the Island's capital. It is not mentioned in Domesday Book, however, which names Bowcombe as the largest and most populous manor on the Isle of Wight.[4] The latter name now applies to a hamlet about a mile to the south-west of Carisbrooke but is inferred to be the name of the village at the time of the Great Survey of 1086. The 18th-century antiquarian Sir Richard Worsley, in The History of the Isle of Wight, conjectured that Boucombe, or Beaucombe, means “pleasant valley”;[5] however, modern place-name dictionaries propose “Bofa's valley” or “above the valley” as alternative interpretations.[6]

In 1086, the manor of Bowcombe was held by William the Conqueror, having previously belonged to Edward the Confessor.[7] There were 60 households, with land for 15 ploughs, 8 acres of meadow, and woodland for five swine. There were also two mills and a church held by the monks of Lyre Abbey. The annual value of manor was £24.[7] The village's present name first appears as “Caresbroc” in 1114,[8] and its meaning is uncertain.[9] It may pertain to a lost Celtic river-name, or possibly the rock on which the castle is built, to which the generic Old English form of brook, “brōc”, was added.[10]

Alexander Ross, a prolific Scottish writer and controversialist, was vicar of Carisbrooke from 1634 until his death in 1654.

The site of the old Carisbrooke railway station lies in the grounds of Christ the King College, in the lower part of the field, which is at the end of Purdy Road. The bank is all that remains of the old line.

When in 1917 the British royal family changed its name from the "House of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha" to the "House of Windsor" and renounced all German titles, the title of Marquess of Carisbrooke was created for the erstwhile German Prince Alexander of Battenberg.

In 1931, the civil parish had a population of 5,232.[11] On 1 April 1933, the parish was abolished and merged with Newport.[12]

Carisbrooke Castle

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Carisbrooke Castle was originally a Roman fort.[citation needed] The castle is at the top of Castle Hill. It was built soon after William the Conqueror came to England. The William FitzOsbern, 1st Earl of Hereford may have been responsible for its construction,[2] but he was killed in battle during 1071 and so would have had little opportunity to oversee the construction. Osbern's son, Roger, is more likely to have built or refortified the castle.[citation needed] It was at Carisbrooke Castle that William arrested his own half brother, Odo for acts of treason.

King Henry I of England granted the castle in the first year of his reign to Richard de Redvers.[2] The Redvers family owned the castle for much of the Medieval period, only ending in November 1293 when the last Redvers, Isabel died. In 1136, Baldwin de Redvers took refuge in the castle on the run from King Stephen of England. The wells on the island ran dry and Baldwin gave up the land in exchange for his head. Baldwin's land was restored to him in 1153 when Henry II became king. Baldwin, the last male in the line, died in 1216 poisoned, it is said by Peter II of Savoy.[citation needed] Isabella de Fortibus, Baldwin's sister took control of the castle and successfully ran it until her death in 1293. After the death of Isabella de Fortibus in 1293 the castle became the property of Edward I and the crown.

In 1355, Edward III granted the ownership of the castle to his eldest daughter, Isabella. In 1377, a French force landed on the Isle of Wight and besieged Carisbrooke castle. The castle did not fall to the French. Later, in 1647, Charles I took refuge at Carisbrooke, but the castle later became his prison, from where he attempted several times to escape but failed. His second daughter, Princess Elizabeth, later died there in 1650, aged 14.

The castle later became the royal residence of Princess Beatrice, the ninth daughter of Queen Victoria, who put in the gardens which have been recently restored. She established the museum in the centre of the bailey.

Cultural references

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The Romantic poet John Keats lodged in Carisbrooke while touring the Isle of Wight in April 1817.[13] In a letter to John Hamilton Reynolds, he wrote, “I see Carisbrooke Castle from my window, and have found several delightful wood-alleys, and copses, and quick freshes”. Finding Carisbrooke to be cheaper than Shanklin, and more convenient for exploring the Island on foot, Keats observed an abundance of primroses and described a view of the mainland “from a little hill nearby”. He started work on Endymion at Carisbrooke.[14]

Carisbrooke appears as "Chalkburne" in the 1886 novel The Silence of Dean Maitland by Maxwell Gray.[15]

Notable people

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References

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  1. ^ "Newport IOW Ward population 2011". Retrieved 18 October 2015.
  2. ^ a b c Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Carisbrooke" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 337.
  3. ^ "Southern Vectis - bus routes". www.islandbuses.info. 2008. Archived from the original on 30 November 2009. Retrieved 4 May 2008.
  4. ^ "Place name: Bowcombe, Isle of Wight, Hampshire". The National Archives. E 31/2/1/1517. Retrieved 5 February 2024.
  5. ^ Worsley, Richard (1781). The History of the Isle of Wight. London: A. Hamilton. p. 236.
  6. ^ "Bowcombe Hundred". Key to English Place-names. University of Nottingham. 5 February 2024.
  7. ^ a b Palmer, John; et al. (5 February 2024). Powell-Smith, Anna (ed.). "Bowcombe". Open Domesday.
  8. ^ Hase, Philip (1988). "The Mother Churches of Hampshire". In Blair, John (ed.). Minsters and Parish Churches: The Local Church in Transition 950-1200. Oxford: Oxford University Committee for Archaeology. pp. 45–66.
  9. ^ "Carisbrooke". Key to English Place-names. University of Nottingham. 5 February 2024.
  10. ^ Room, Adrian (2003). The Penguin Dictionary of British Place Names (1st ed.). London: Penguin Books. p. 86. ISBN 9780140514537.
  11. ^ "Population statistics Carisbrooke CP/AP through time". A Vision of Britain through Time. Retrieved 9 September 2023.
  12. ^ "Relationships and changes Carisbrooke CP/AP through time". A Vision of Britain through Time. Retrieved 9 September 2023.
  13. ^ Keats, John (1954). Letters of John Keats. Oxford University Press. p. 6.
  14. ^ Keats, John (1896). Thorn-Drury, George (ed.). Poems of John Keats. Vol. 1. London: Lawrence & Bullen. pp. CXIII.
  15. ^ 'A pictorial and descriptive guide to the Isle of Wight in six sections', Ward Lock and Company, 1900
  16. ^ "Annie Maria Gertrude Fenton: death of a literary lady" (PDF). Friends of Carisbrooke & Newport Cemeteries. Retrieved 15 February 2024.
  17. ^ "Princess Beatrice". English Heritage. Retrieved 15 February 2024.
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