A variety of things, such as:-
Starting as villages accommodating tenants and employees on manorial estates.
Market towns - centres of trade and for some, area governance, for surrounding farms and villages.
Transport links - originally mainly navigable rivers and sea-ports.
To serve specific industries like mining.
On trade-routes, especially at their cross-roads.
idkpworj see
meetinghouse
There are two towns called "Buxton" in England, on in the south of England and one in Derbyshire, near Manchester. Because the English who migrated around the world during the European expansion named their new towns after towns in England, there are many other places called Buxton around the world in countries that were settled or colonized by the English.
Medieval society no longer centered around the castle. The towns and cities (population centers) grew.
There are no such towns.
There are no towns or cities in England that begin with the letters 'Cab'.
Abingdon, Adlington, Alford and Alnwick are towns in England. They begin with the letter A.
In 1500, the number of towns varied significantly by region, and precise counts are difficult to ascertain. However, Europe had thousands of towns, with countries like England, France, and the Holy Roman Empire hosting many. For instance, England had around 1,000 towns, while Italy was home to several hundred city-states and towns. Overall, estimates suggest there were likely tens of thousands of towns across the globe at that time.
Depends on what your trying to say.Either can be correct.examples:Something can be centered on a table.A conversation can be centered around a certain topic.A conversation can't be centered around anything. It can revolve around something or center on something, but "center around" is a conflation of these two expressions.
doing a school project and was wondering the same thing. pls help!
a village green--a central square with a meetinghouse
Colin Towns was born in 1949, in London, England, UK.