(Redirected from Forest of Arden)'Arden' is a district in
Warwickshire,
England, traditionally regarded as stretching from the
River Avon to the
River Tame[1]. Derived from the British Celtic word ''ardu'', meaning "high land", the area was formerly heavily wooded and known as the 'Forest of Arden.' Located in the geographical centre of England, the Forest of Arden was bounded by the Roman roads
Icknield Street,
Watling Street,
Fosse Way, and Salt Road
[2]. It encompassed an area corresponding to the north-western half of the traditional county of Warwickshire, stretching from
Stratford-on-Avon in the south to
Tamworth in the north, and included what are now the large cities of
Birmingham and
Coventry, in addition to areas that are still largely rural with numerous pockets of woodland (even today, Birmingham has more trees than any other British or indeed European city
[3]). The most important and largest settlement in the forest was
Henley-in-Arden, the site of an
Iron Age hillfort.
Thorkell of Arden, a descendent of the ruling family of
Mercia, was one of only two native English landowners in the whole of England who were not dispossessed by the
Normans after
1066, and his descendents continued to hold land in the area for centuries thereafter. One such descendent was
Mary Arden, mother of
William Shakespeare[4].
The Forest of Arden is stated by Shakespeare to be the setting for ''
As You Like It''. However, since the play is also set in
France, it should not necessarily be thought of as taking place in a real forest in Arden. (According to the ''Oxford Shakespeare'', Shakespeare's "Forest of Arden" is likely to be an anglicisation of the French
Ardennes forest.)
From around
1162, until the suppression of the order in
1312, the
Knights Templar owned a preceptory at
Temple Balsall in the middle of the Forest of Arden. The property then passed to the
Knights Hospitaller, who held it until the
Reformation in the 16th century.
Robert Catesby, leader of the
Gunpowder Plot of
1605, was a native of
Lapworth, a village in Arden. It is believed than many local families had resisted the Reformation and retained Catholic sympathies, including Shakespeare's family, whose paternal ancestors were from Temple Balsall.
Towns in the area include:
★
Hampton-in-Arden
★
Henley-in-Arden
★
Tanworth-in-Arden
References
1. http://www.solihull.gov.uk/upload/public/attachments/9/ArdenSummary.pdf
2. http://www.cv81pl.freeserve.co.uk/arden.htm
3. http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/workshops/webmaster-2004/about/
4. http://www.englishhistory.info/Shakespeare/shakespeares-mother.html
Further reading
★
Landowners and their Estates in the Forest of Arden in the Fifteenth Century, Andrew Watkins, , , Ag Hist Rev,
External links
★
About the Forest
★
About Mary Arden