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Warwickshire

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Warwickshire

Enlarge picture
Locator map for the English administrative region of Warwickshire.

County of central England.

Area

1,980 sq km/764 sq mi

Towns and cities

Warwick (administrative headquarters), Nuneaton, Royal Leamington Spa, Rugby, Stratford-upon-Avon (birthplace of the English dramatist Shakespeare)

Physical

rivers Avon, Stour, and Tame; remains of the ‘Forest of Arden’ (portrayed by Shakespeare in As You Like It)

Features

Kenilworth (c. 1210) and Warwick (Norman) castles; Edgehill, site of the Battle of Edgehill in 1642, during the English Civil War; annual Royal Agricultural Show held at Stoneleigh

Agriculture

cereals (barley and wheat); dairy farming; fruit; market gardening

Industries

cement; engineering; ironstone, and lime are worked in the east and south; motor industry; textiles; tourism

Population

(2001) 505,900

Famous people

Rupert Brooke (poet), George Eliot (writer), William Shakespeare (dramatist and poet)

Topography

Warwickshire is bounded on the north by Staffordshire, and Derbyshire; on the east by Leicestershire and Northamptonshire; on the south by Gloucestershire and Oxfordshire; and on the west by Worcestershire and the West Midlands. The surface is not very flat, though the highest point, Ebrington Hill, is only 260 m/853 ft.

Ecclesiastical buildings

The 15th-century Beauchamp Chapel of St Mary's church, Warwick, is noteworthy, and there are the remains of a 12th-century Cistercian monastery at Coombe Abbey, and of other religious buildings at Kenilworth (12th century), Maxstoke (14th century), Merevale (12th century), Stoneleigh (12th century), and Wroxall (14th century).



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? Mentioned in ? References in classic literature
 
James Burne Worson was a shoemaker who lived in Leamington, Warwickshire, England.
To be certain, sir, it is a wonderful thing, and I have been thinking with myself ever since, how it was she came to know it; not but I saw an old woman here t'other day a begging at the door, who looked as like her we saw in Warwickshire, that caused all that mischief to us.
You leave your good father, my dear, in hands as earnest and as loving as your own; he shall be taken every conceivable care of; during the next fortnight, while you are in Warwickshire and thereabouts, even Tellson's shall go to the wall (comparatively speaking) before him.
 
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