Thursday, 4 October 2012

Car Hire Blandford- History

Blandford is situated between Cranborne Chase and the Dorset Downs, at the south eastern corner of the Blackmore Vale, 24 km (15 mi) northwest of Poole and 35 km (22 mi) southwest of Salisbury. The town lies at the junction of the A350 and A354 main roads but is skirted by an eastern bypass.
The main road running through the town is the B3082, connecting Blandford Forum to Wimborne Minster. Buses run from the town to locations including Poole, Bournemouth, Salisbury and Shaftesbury with the primary operator being Wilts & Dorset. The town is 15 miles (24 km) from Poole railway station and 15 miles (24 km) from Bournemouth Airport.

History

Blandford has been a fording point since Anglo-Saxon times, when it was recorded as Blaen-y-ford and as Blaneford in the Domesday Book, meaning ford of the river of blay or gudgeon. By the 13th century it had become an important market town with a livestock market serving the nearby Blackmore Vale with its many dairy farms. The Latin word Forum, meaning market, was recorded in 1540.It was an important break on the journey between the port of Weymouth and the capital London. There is still a weekly outdoor market and a bi-weekly indoor market held in the Corn Exchange
In 1731 much of the town was destroyed in a fire. John and William Bastard rebuilt the town over the following 30 years and the town centre features Georgian architecture from the 1730s to 1760s.
From 1860 the town was an important stop on the Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway, which ran from Bath to Bournemouth until the line closed in 1966.

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Car hire salisbury

Standing proudly amid an ancient landscape high on Salisbury Plain, Stonehenge is a prehistoric monument of unique importance. Erected between 3,000 BC and 1,600 BC, its orientation on the rising and setting sun is one of its many remarkable features, but why it was built in this way remains a mystery to this day.
Designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site, Stonehenge is surrounded by the remains of over 400 other scheduled monuments, some of which are older than the stone circle itself.
Couple at Old Sarum (Photo SDC/Jon Stone)
Elsewhere around the region you can also explore the massive Iron Age hill fort of Old Sarum which was re-used by the Romans, Saxons and Normans before becoming the original settlement of Salisbury; unearth the remains of the largest known Roman villa in the area at Rockbourne; or discover the unusual hexagonal ruins of Old Wardour Castle.

You can find Salisbury and south Wiltshire Museum, The Rifles military museum, Edward Heath's Arundells, and the National Trust's Mompesson House in the glorious setting of the Cathedral Close.
The Museum is home of the award-winning Stonehenge Gallery and houses an extensive collections relating to the history of Salisbury, and the archaeology of south Wiltshire, including finds from Old Sarum, Figsbury Ring hillfort and the former Royal residence of Clarendon Palace which you can walk past on the Monarch's Way and Clarendon Way near Salisbury.

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