Highways And Byways In Cambridge And Ely
John William Edward Conybeare
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4 chapters
HIGHWAYS AND BYWAYS IN CAMBRIDGE AND ELY
HIGHWAYS AND BYWAYS IN CAMBRIDGE AND ELY
MACMILLAN AND CO., Limited LONDON . BOMBAY . CALCUTTA MELBOURNE THE MACMILLAN COMPANY NEW YORK . BOSTON . CHICAGO ATLANTA . SAN FRANCISCO THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, Ltd TORONTO Ely Cathedral. Western Tower. BY THE Rev. EDWARD CONYBEARE AUTHOR OF "HISTORY OF CAMBRIDGESHIRE," "RIDES AROUND CAMBRIDGE," ETC. WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY FREDERICK L. GRIGGS MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED ST. MARTIN'S STREET, LONDON 1910 Richard Clay and Sons, Limited. BREAD STREET HILL, E.C., AND BUNGAY, SUFFOLK....
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PREFACE
PREFACE
The Highways of Cambridgeshire and the Isle of Ely are usually regarded as unattractive compared with those of England in general. Nor is this criticism wholly unfair. The county does lack the features which most make for picturesque rural scenery. There are no high hills, little even of undulation, and, what is yet more fatal, a sad sparsity of timber. The Highways, then, seem to the traveller merely stretches of ground to be got over as speedily as may be, and he rejoices that their flatness l
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HIGHWAYS AND BYWAYS IN CAMBRIDGESHIRE
HIGHWAYS AND BYWAYS IN CAMBRIDGESHIRE
Cambridge Greenery.—The "Backs."—The Lawns.—Logan's Views.—Old Common Fields.—Old Cambridge.—Origin of Cambridge.—The Castle.—Camboritum.—Granta-ceaster.—Danes in Cambridge.—Cambridgeshire formed.—Battle of Ringmere.—Norman Conquest.—The Jewry.—Religious Houses.—Rise of University.—Town and Gown.—Proctors.—The Colleges.—Examinations.—College Life.—Cambridge and Oxford. Cambridge has been described by an appreciative American novelist as "a harmony in grey and green." And indeed it is true that f
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Notes
Notes
1 : The word "Fellow" signifies, in any College, one of the strictly limited corporation to whom its whole property legally belongs. This corporation is kept filled up by co-option; the most distinguished of the junior students being usually chosen. 2 : The kingdom of Mercia comprised the Midlands, and was (roughly) bounded on the north by the Humber and Mersey, on the west by Wales, on the south by the Thames, and on the east by the Cam and the Lea. 3 : An ordinary "Hundred" contained an area s
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