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| Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Oxfordshire |
For more information on Oxfordshire, visit Britannica.com.
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| British History: Oxfordshire |
In Roman times the region belonged to the Dobunni tribe. It covered the area between the Cotswolds at Chipping Norton and the Chilterns at Watlington and, until modern times, much of it was heavily wooded.
the town of Oxford owed its existence to a ford and later a ferry. It developed early as an important Saxon centre. Councils were held there in the early 11th cent. and in 1066 it was the sixth largest town in the kingdom. As late as 1901, the population of 50, 000 was almost double that of all the other towns in the county combined: Banbury had 7, 300, Chipping Norton 3, 700, Henley 3, 500, Thame 2, 900, Witney 2, 800, and Bicester 2, 700.
In the 7th and 8th cent. the area was disputed between Wessex, south of the Thames, and Mercia the midlands kingdom. Wessex regained it after Ellendun in 825. It became a shire in the early 11th cent. when Edward and Æthelfleda were reorganizing Wessex's defences against the Danes, who burned Oxford in 1009.
Ecclesiastical organization fluctuated in similar fashion. An early bishopric was established at Dorchester in 634, possibly because it had been a Roman town. But after 680 it was placed under Sherborne, a Wessex diocese. When Mercia regained control, the see was moved to Leicester. Dorchester recovered its position c.870, probably because Leicester had been overrun by the Danes. the bishopric stayed at Dorchester until after the Conquest but was transferred to Lincoln in 1072. For five centuries the shire remained a rather remote part of the vast Lincoln diocese, until a new see was created at Oxford itself in 1542.
Despite the intellectual and ecclesiastical importance of Oxford, the shire remained rural and secluded. Those industries which did develop were agriculturally derived and small in scale—cloth manufacture of different kinds at Witney, Chipping Norton, and Banbury, saddles at Burford, lace and slippers at Bicester, leather at Bampton, brewing at Henley, glove-making at Oxford and Woodstock. As late as the 1830s, the shire could be described as having ‘no manufactures of any account, being chiefly agricultural’. But in 1901 William Morris opened a bicycle-repair shop at Oxford—the forerunner of the great car factory at Cowley.
In the Civil War of the 17th cent., Oxford was the king's capital. the parks and quads became encampments, trees and shrubs were cut down, and attendance at lectures languished. Oxford surrendered in 1646 a few weeks after Charles I had fled, disguised as a servant. Politically city and county continued to be royalist in sympathy. In 1681 Charles II summoned Parliament there and routed his Whig opponents.
the Oxford canal, opened in 1790, and the network of railways which developed in the county in the 19th cent. speeded up internal communication, but did little to promote any great industrial growth. the Local Government Act of 1972 extended the shire south of the Thames, bringing in Abingdon, Wallingford, and Wantage—yet another victory for Mercia over Wessex. the M40 bisects the county from south-east to north-west, from Aston Rowant to Banbury. But north Oxfordshire remains peaceful and unspoiled, and Blenheim, once a Whig bastion in a Tory countryside, is perhaps the finest of all landscaped parks.
| Columbia Encyclopedia: Oxfordshire |
| Wikipedia: Oxfordshire |
| Oxfordshire | |
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| Geography | |
| Status | Ceremonial & Non-metropolitan county |
|---|---|
| Region: | South East England |
| Area - Total - Admin. council |
Ranked 22nd 2,605 km² Ranked 19th |
| Admin HQ: | Oxford |
| ISO 3166-2: | GB-OXF |
| ONS code: | 38 |
| NUTS 3: | UKJ14 |
| Demographics | |
| Population - Total (2008 est.) - Density - Admin. Council |
Ranked 35th 639,700 246 / km² Ranked 17th |
| Ethnicity: | 95.1% White 1.7% S. Asian |
| Politics | |
Oxfordshire County Council http://www.oxfordshire.gov.uk/ |
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| Executive | Conservative |
| Members of Parliament | |
| Districts | |
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Oxfordshire (pronounced /ˈɒksfərdʃər/ or /ˈɒksfərdʃɪər/; abbreviated Oxon, from the Latinised form Oxonia) is a county in the South East England region, bordering on Northamptonshire, Buckinghamshire, Berkshire, Wiltshire, Gloucestershire, and Warwickshire.
It is divided into five local government districts: Oxford, Cherwell, Vale of White Horse (after the Uffington White Horse), West Oxfordshire and South Oxfordshire.
The county has a major tourism industry. The area is noted for the concentration of performance motorsport companies and facilities. Oxford University Press has headed a concentration of print and publishing firms; the university is also linked to the concentration of local biotechnology companies.
The main centre of population is the city of Oxford. Other significant settlements are Banbury, Bicester, Kidlington, and Chipping Norton to the north of Oxford; Witney to the west; Thame and Chinnor to the east; and Abingdon, Wantage, Didcot, Wallingford and Henley-on-Thames to the south. Future population growth in the county is hoped to be concentrated around Oxford, Banbury, Bicester, Didcot and Witney, near the South Midlands growth area.
The highest point of the county is White Horse Hill, in the Vale of White Horse, reaching 261 metres (856 ft) [1].
Oxfordshire's county flower is the Snake's-head Fritillary.
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The county of Oxfordshire was formed in the early years of the 10th century and is broadly situated in the land between the River Thames to the south, the Cotswolds to the west, the Chilterns to the east and the Midlands to the north, with spurs running south to Henley-on-Thames and north to Banbury.[citation needed]
Historically the area has always had some importance, containing valuable agricultural land in the centre of the country and the prestigious university in the county town of Oxford (whose name came from Anglo-Saxon Oxenaford = "ford for oxen"). Ignored by the Romans, it was not until the formation of a settlement at Oxford in the eighth century that the area grew in importance. Alfred the Great was born across the Thames in Wantage in Berkshire. The University of Oxford was founded in 1096, though its collegiate structure did not develop until later on. The area was part of the Cotswolds wool trade from the 13th century, generating much wealth, particularly in the western portions of the county in the Oxfordshire Cotswolds. Morris Motors was founded in Oxford in 1912, bringing heavy industry to an otherwise agricultural county. The importance of agriculture as an employer has declined rapidly in the 20th century though; currently under one percent of the county's population are involved due to high mechanisation.
Throughout most of its history the county was divided into fourteen hundreds, namely Bampton, Banbury, Binfield, Bloxham, Bullingdon, Chadlington, Dorchester, Ewelme, Langtree, Lewknor, Pyrton, Ploughley, Thame and Wootton.
The Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry, the main army unit in the area, was based at the Barracks on Bullingdon Green, Cowley.
The Vale of the White Horse district and parts of the South Oxfordshire administrative district south of the River Thames were historically part of Berkshire, but were added to the administrative county of Oxfordshire in 1974. Conversely, the Caversham area of Reading was historically part of Oxfordshire as was the parish of Stokenchurch, now in administrative Buckinghamshire.
This is a chart of trend of regional gross value added of Oxfordshire at current basic prices published (pp. 240-253) by Office for National Statistics with figures in millions of British Pounds Sterling.
| Year | Regional Gross Value Added[2] | Agriculture[3] | Industry[4] | Services[5] |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1995 | 7,607 | 120 | 2,084 | 5,404 |
| 2000 | 10,594 | 80 | 2,661 | 7,853 |
| 2003 | 12,942 | 93 | 2,665 | 10,184 |
Oxfordshire has a completely comprehensive education system with 23 independent schools and 35 state schools. The state schools are from the ages of 11 to either 16 or 18. Only eight schools do not have a sixth form; these are mostly in South Oxfordshire and Cherwell districts.
The county has two universities, significantly the University of Oxford and also Oxford Brookes University, both located in Oxford. Oxfordshire also has Wroxton College, which has an affiliation with Fairleigh Dickinson University in the United States of America, and whose campus is located in Banbury.
Arguably the most famous building in Oxfordshire is Blenheim Palace at Woodstock. It was built by the great architect John Vanbrugh for John Churchill, the first Duke of Marlborough, after he had won the battle of Blenheim. The gardens, which can be visited, were designed by the landscape gardener "Capability Brown", who planted the trees in the battle formation of the victorious troops. In the palace, which can also be visited, Sir Winston Churchill was born.
Chastleton House, on the Gloucestershire and Warwickshire borders, is a great country mansion that was built on property bought from Robert Catesby, who was one of the men involved in the Gunpowder Plot with Guy Fawkes. Stonor Park, another country mansion, has belonged to the recusant Stonor family for centuries.
| Rank | Town | Population | Year |
| 1 | Oxford | 155,000 | |
| 2 | Banbury | 52,000 | |
| 3 | Abingdon | 36,000 | |
| 4 | Bicester | 28,672 | |
| 5 | Witney | 23,765 | 2001 |
| 6 | Didcot | 22,700 | |
| 7 | Kidlington | 17,000 | |
| 8 | Carterton | 14,000 | |
| 9 | Thame | 12,000 | |
| 10 | Henley on Thames | 10,513 | |
| 11 | Wantage | 9,767 | |
| 12 | Wallingford | 7,000 | |
| 13 | Chipping Norton | 5,972 | |
| 14 | Faringdon | 5,600 | |
| 15 | Watlington | 3,000 |
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| Look up Oxfordshire in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
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