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River Avon

 
Wikipedia: River Avon (Hampshire)
 
River Avon
River
none The River Avon in Salisbury
The River Avon in Salisbury
Country England
Regions Wiltshire, Hampshire, Dorset
Tributaries
 - left Nadder, Wylye, Bourne, Ebble
Source
 - location Wiltshire, Devizes, England
Mouth English Channel
 - location Mudeford, England
Length 96 km (60 mi)

The River Avon is a river in the counties of Wiltshire, Hampshire and Dorset in the south of England, sometimes distinguished as the Salisbury Avon or the Hampshire Avon.

Contents

Etymology

The river's name is a tautology: Avon is derived from the Proto-Brythonic word meaning "river", and therefore the river's name means River River.

Course

The Avon rises in Wiltshire east of Devizes, draining the Vale of Pewsey. From here it cuts through the chalk scarp at Upavon, flowing southwards across Salisbury Plain through Durrington, Amesbury and Salisbury. To the south of Salisbury it enters the Hampshire Basin, flowing along the western edge of the New Forest through Fordingbridge and Ringwood, meeting up with the river Stour at Christchurch, to flow into Christchurch Harbour and the English Channel at Mudeford.

All the significant tributaries of the Avon including the Nadder, Wylye, Bourne and Ebble converge within a short distance around Salisbury.

For part of its path it forms the border between Dorset and Hampshire. Prior to the 1974 reorganization of local government the whole of the section now in or bordering Dorset was wholly within Hampshire, leading to the river being popularly known as the Hampshire Avon.

The Avon Valley Path goes from Salisbury to Christchurch.

A view of the River Avon in Hampshire near Fordingbridge.

Rights of Use

The public have right of way to use established footpaths across private land in England. No such general right of way exists for the navigability of rivers on private land. Canoeists seeking legitimate access to the Avon have recently identified a long-forgotten Act in their favour. The "Act for making the River Avon navigable from Christchurch to the city of New Sarum" was enacted in 1664 under Charles II. Cases have yet to come to court.[1]

References

  1. ^ BBC NEWS | England | 1664 law could prove right to row

See also


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "River Avon (Hampshire)" Read more