Cambridgeshire: The Country of the Fens (King's England)
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Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1027462 in Books
- Published on: 2001-05-01
- Original language: English
- Binding: Hardcover
- 240 pages
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
'There have been many books on Cambridgeshire but never one like this.' Thus ran the publisher's advertisement for the original edition of this book, first published in 1939. The Cambridgeshire landscape has seen many changes in the last half-century or so, though there are also areas where it has been lovingly preserved. In this anecdotal, alphabetical ramble round the historic county, Arthur Mee patiently catalogues all of the things for which Cambridgeshire is famous. The City of Cambridge itself, with its wonderful University and College architecture, Ely with its cathedral, Wisbech, March, and the many villages and hamlets which together go to make up the rich tapestry of Cambridgeshire's past. Here is a mulberry tree at Levington under which Goldsmith may have written She Stoops to Conquer; there is, perhaps, a Village College, founded to teach the young the arts and crafts of the countryside; here are the famous woad plantations of Parson Drove. At Whittlesey is a market house standing on pillars of stone. At Burwell is a black-towered windmill, and above the thatched barns of Bourne rises a smock mill of Cromwell's day.
