Chester, is a city in
Cheshire, England.
Lying on the
River Dee, close to the border with
Wales, and is the largest and most populous settlement of the wider unitary authority area of
Cheshire West and Chester, which had a population of 328,
100 according to the
2001 Census. Chester was granted city status in 1541.
Chester was founded as a "castrum" or
Roman fort with the name
Deva Victrix in the year 79 by the
Roman Legio II Adiutrix during the reign of the
Emperor Vespasian. Chester's four main roads, Eastgate,
Northgate,
Watergate and
Bridge, follow routes laid out at this time -- almost 2,000 years ago. One of the three main
Roman army camps,
Deva later became a major settlement in the
Roman province of Britannia.
The Roman Empire fell three hundred years later, and the Romano-British established a number of petty kingdoms in its place. Chester is thought to have been part of
Powys at this time.
King Arthur is said to have fought his ninth battle at the city of the legions and later
St Augustine came to the city to try and unite the church and hold his synod with the
Welsh Bishops. In 616,
Æthelfrith of Northumbria defeated a Welsh army at the
Battle of Chester and probably established the Anglo-Saxon position in the area from then on
.
In the late
7th century, (AD 689)
King Æthelred of
Mercia founded the
Minster Church of
West Mercia on what is considered to be an early
Christian Site and known as The Minster of
St John the Baptist, Chester (now
St John's Church) which later became the first cathedral. Much later the body of thelred's Niece,
St Werburgh was removed from Hanbury in Staffordshire in the
9th century and, in order to save its desecration by
Danish marauders, she was reburied in the Church of SS
Peter & Paul - later to become the
Abbey Church (the present cathedral). Her name is still remembered in
St Werburgh's Street which passes alongside the cathedral, and near to the city walls. A new Church dedicated to
St Peter alone was founded in AD907 by the
Lady Æthelfleda at what was to become the
Cross
The Saxons extended and strengthened the walls of Chester to protect the city against the
Danes, who occupied it for a short time until
Alfred seized all the cattle and laid waste the surrounding land to drive them out. In fact it was Alfred's daughter
Æthelflæd,
Lady of the Mercians, that built the new
Saxon burh. The Anglo-Saxons called Chester Ceaster or Legeceaster.
In 973, the
Anglo Saxon Chronicle records that, two years after his coronation at
Bath,
King Edgar of
England, came to Chester where he held his court in a palace in a place now known as
Edgar's field near the old
Dee bridge in
Handbridge.
Taking the helm of a barge, he was rowed the short distance up the River Dee from Edgar's field to the great Minster Church of St John the Baptist by six (the monk
Henry Bradshaw records he was rowed by eight kings) tributary kings called 'reguli'.
Chester was one of the last towns in England to fall to the
Normans in the
Norman conquest of England.
William the Conqueror ordered the construction of a castle, to dominate the town and the nearby
Welsh border.
Chester has a number of medieval buildings, but some of the black-and-white buildings within the city centre are actually
Victorian restorations. Chester is one of the best preserved walled cities in
Britain.
Apart from a 100-metre (330 ft) section, the listed
Grade I walls are almost complete.
The Industrial Revolution brought railways, canals, and new roads to the city, which saw substantial expansion and development --
Chester Town Hall and the
Grosvenor Museum are examples of
Victorian architecture from this period
- published: 10 May 2014
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