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Knapwell

Coordinates:52°15′N0°03′W / 52.25°N 0.05°W /52.25; -0.05
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Human settlement in Cambridgeshire, England

Human settlement in England
Knapwell
Knapwell, All Saints
Knapwell is located in Cambridgeshire
Knapwell
Knapwell
Location withinCambridgeshire
Population110 (2001 estimate)
OS grid referenceTL331631
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townCambridge
Postcode districtCB23
Dialling code01954
52°15′N0°03′W / 52.25°N 0.05°W /52.25; -0.05

Knapwell is a hamlet in Cambridgeshire situated about 10 miles (16 km) west ofCambridge. It is within thediocese of Ely. Its population was estimated at 110 in 2001. At the 2011 census the population had fallen to fewer than 100.

Nearby villages includeBoxworth,Conington,Elsworth and the expanding new settlement ofCambourne.

History

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The place-name 'Knapwell' is first attested in an Anglo-Saxon will of 1043–5, where it appears asCnapwelle. It was referred to asCnapenwelle in 1060, and was listed asChenepewelle in theDomesday Book of 1086, when it was held by the Abbot ofRamsey. The name means 'Cnapa's well or stream'. 'Cnapa' may be theOld Englishcnapa meaning boy or servant, so the name might mean 'boy's well'.[1] It seems likely that Knapwell is named after thechalybeate Red Well in the wood just to the east of the village.[2] The well was the only source of water for both the village and neighbouringBoxworth. Its waters were known for their medicinal properties.[3]

A mound to the north-east of the church is believed to be the motte of a Normanmotte-and-bailey castle. It would have been a small fortification, probably with a timber superstructure, and perhaps dating fromThe Anarchy underKing Stephen.

The village's manor house was established in Norman times, between the church and the motte, and traces of a building and moat remain in the wood (Overhall Grove) to the east of the church.[2]

Church

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The village has had a church, dating back to at least 1180. A church, dedicated to All Saints, was probably built in the early 14th century. The medieval church had a long, low chancel and a three-bay aisled nave, all under a single roof, and a west tower. In 1864 the medieval church was demolished, except for the tower, and rebuilt in a plain Gothic style. The original 14th-century tower is built of field stones dressed with limestone and is unbuttressed.[4]

The Knapwell elm trees

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Remains of old pollard tree in Knapwell, once known for a group of pollarded Field Elms known as "the Dodds"

Knapwell was once celebrated for its many ancientpollardedField Elms, which marked the old boundaries, closes and lanes of the larger medieval village and which were locally called "the Dodds".[5][6] The trees grew both in the fields immediately bordering the main street and amongst the houses of the modern village. The name may have derived from "dodderel", a dialect word for a pollard.[5] The trees succumbed toDutch Elm Disease in the 1980s.

Overhall Grove (not to be confused with Knapwell Wood) has a notably large number of surviving elm trees.

Village life

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The village has no shops or pubs, though was home to the Three Horseshoes pub until its closure in 1880.[2]

The local primary school is Elsworth CE(A) Primary School[7] inElsworth.

References

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  1. ^Eilert Ekwall,The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-names, p.281.
  2. ^abc"Knapwell". Victoria County History.
  3. ^"Knapwell - The Red Well". Megalithic Portal.
  4. ^"Knapwell Church". Victoria County History.
  5. ^abMabey, R.The Flowering of Britain, Hutchinson, 1980, p.97
  6. ^Rackham, OliverTrees and Woodland in the British Landscape, Dent, 1976, p.1171
  7. ^"Elsworth Primary School".

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toKnapwell.
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