Salisbury - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about Salisbury Printer Friendly
Dictionary, Encyclopedia and Thesaurus - The Free Dictionary
1,733,419,192 visitors served.
forum mailing list For webmasters
?
New: Language forums
Dictionary/
thesaurus
Medical
dictionary
Legal
dictionary
Financial
dictionary
Acronyms
 
Idioms
Encyclopedia
Wikipedia
encyclopedia
?

Salisbury

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Acronyms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.03 sec.

Salisbury

Enlarge picture
Interior of Salisbury Cathedral, Wiltshire, England. Founded in 1220 by Bishop Richard Poore, the architecture of the cathedral is entirely Early English; the spire, not included in the original plan, was added in 1334, and at 123 m/404 ft is the highest spire in England.

City and market town in Wiltshire, south England, on the edge of Salisbury Plain 135 km/84 mi southwest of London; population (2001) 44,400. Salisbury is an agricultural centre, and industries include brewing and engineering. The nearby Wilton Royal Carpet factory closed in 1995. The cathedral of St Mary, built 1220–66, is an example of Early English architecture; its decorated spire 123 m/404 ft is the highest in England; its clock (1386) is one of the oldest still working. The cathedral library contains one of only four copies of the Magna Carta.

Another name for the modern city of Salisbury is New Sarum, Sarum being an abbreviated form of the medieval Latin corruption (‘Sarisburiensis’) of the ancient Roman name Sorbiodonum. Old Sarum, site of an Iron Age fort, cathedral, and town on a 90-m/300-ft hill to the north, was abandoned in 1220. Old Sarum was the most famous of the ‘rotten boroughs’ prior to the 1832 Reform Act.

Location

The city lies amid level meadowlands, at the confluence of the Avon with three small rivers, the Nadder, Bourne, and Wylye, and surrounded by hills.

Features

Salisbury was moved from Old Sarum at the beginning of the 13th century, and built on a settled plan 3 km/1.8 mi below the old citadel by Bishop Poore. The planning is indicated by the many straight and wide streets running north to south and east to west, forming ‘chequers’ or ‘squares’, with a fine open marketplace in the centre. Audley House, once owned by Mervin, Lord Audley, is a beautiful building, now used as the church house. ‘The Hall of John Halle’ was built in 1407 by the wool merchant John Halle. Poultry Cross is believed to have been erected in the early 16th century by a nobleman as an act of penance. It is in the form of an open hexagon with six arches and six piers, heavily buttressed. The Old George Hotel, built 15th–16th-century, was perhaps a lodging for pilgrims to the cathedral. The guildhall is on the site of the 14th-century guildhall and city jail. One of the finest examples of timber framing in Salisbury is the house of John A 'Port, built in 1425 by a merchant of that name, who was six times mayor of the city.

The Shoemakers' Guildhall, built in 1638, was added to the timber-framed house left to the Shoemakers' Company by one Philip Crewe, a schoolmaster. This house still overhangs the highway as it did centuries ago. The council house, Bourne Hill, off the London Road, is the historically interesting former college of St Edmund. In the grounds is the only remaining portion of the city rampart. In St Ann Street is the Salisbury, Southern Wiltshire, and Blackmore Museum, containing a large and representative collection of local exhibits. The finely timbered Joiners' Hall, also in St Ann Street, is one of the old halls of the ancient trade guilds of the city. It is Elizabethan, and was purchased by the National Trust in 1898. The Salisbury diocesan training college is on the site of the old deanery in the Close. Salisbury is the ‘Melchester’ of Thomas Hardy novels and the ‘Barchester’ of Anthony Trollope's.

Churches

Apart from the cathedral, the three oldest churches of the city are St Martin's, St Thomas's of Canterbury, and St Edmund's. The tower, chancel, and font of St Martin's are Early English, the nave and aisles are 15th century. The present 15th-century Perpendicular church of St Thomas replaced a 13th-century church. From early times it was a chapel of ease to the cathedral. About the end of the 15th century the great west window and finely carved Tudor roof were added to the nave, and later the remarkable fresco of the Last Judgement over the chancel was executed. St Edmund's, which adjoins the Council House, is dedicated to St Edmund of Abingdon, Archbishop of Canterbury. It is part of a large collegiate church which was built in 1407 to replace one built in the 13th century.

Salisbury

Former name (to 1980) of Harare, the capital of Zimbabwe.

Salisbury

Town in northwestern Connecticut, on the Massachusetts and New York borders in the Taconic Mountains; population (1990) 4,100. It is a residential and resort town, bounded to the east by the Housatonic River.

It includes the villages of Lakeville, Salisbury, Ore Hill, Taconic, and Lime Rock.

Salisbury

City and administrative headquarters of Wicomico County, southeastern Maryland, on the Wicomico River, in the south-central part of the Delmarva Peninsula, near the Delaware border; population (1990) 20,600. Its economy is primarily agricultural; regional farms produce poultry, fruits, and vegetables. Industries process foods and manufacture textiles, cabinets, plastics, service station equipment, and printed computer forms.

Founded in 1732, Salisbury developed as a distribution centre for the peninsula, and was long the second port of Maryland. Salisbury State University (1925) is here.

Salisbury

Town in northeastern Massachusetts, in Essex County, 58 km/36 mi northeast of Boston, at the mouth of the Merrimack River; population (2000 est) 4,500. It is primarily residential and commercial. Tourism is the most important industry, as more than 200,000 visitors come to its six-km/four-mi beach each year.

It was settled as Colchester in 1638 and incorporated as Salisbury two years later; in the past the economy has depended on fishing, shipbuilding, and 19th-century woollen manufacture.

Salisbury

Town in south-central New Hampshire, 24 km/15 mi northwest of Concord; population (1990) 1,100. It is a residential and agricultural community.

The US politician and orator Daniel Webster was born (1782) in a neighbourhood that is now part of the town of Franklin, to the east.

Salisbury

City and administrative headquarters of Rowan County, west-central North Carolina, in the Piedmont, 51 km/32 mi southwest of Winston-Salem; population (1990) 23,100. It is an industrial centre, manufacturing textiles, machinery, chemicals, furniture, paper products, glass, mobile homes, rubber hose, soft drinks, and pharmaceuticals.

It is home to Catawba College (1851), Livingston College (1879), a technical institute, and a Veterans Administration hospital.

History

Settled in 1753 as a road junction, Salisbury saw action in the American Revolution, just before Guilford Courthouse (February 1781). It was the site of one of the largest Confederate prisons during the Civil War; its National Cemetery houses the graves of 11,700 Federal soldiers.



How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content.
?Page tools
Printer friendly
Cite / link
Email
Feedback
?Sign in SSL protected
Email:
Password:
Register

? Mentioned in ? References in classic literature
 
One day as he was walking into Salisbury to play with some friends "he saw a poor man with a poorer horse, which was fallen under his load.
That is the spire of Salisbury Cathedral, and when we leave that we shall be getting close to the old Roman county, and you will naturally want your eyes.
``It may be the Earl of Salisbury,'' said De Bracy;
 
Hutchinson browser? ? Full browser
 
 
Hutchinson Encyclopedia
?

Disclaimer | Privacy policy | Feedback | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc.
All content on this website, including dictionary, thesaurus, literature, geography, and other reference data is for informational purposes only. This information should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional. Terms of Use.