Marden, Herefordshire: Difference between revisions

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|population=
|population=
|census year=
|census year=
|post town=
|post town=Hereford
|postcode=
|postcode=HR1
|dialling code=
|dialling code=01432
|LG district=
|LG district=Herefordshire
|constituency=
|constituency=North Herefordshire
}}
}}
'''Marden''' is a village in [[Herefordshire]], seven miles due north of the City of [[Hereford]].  It stands on the eastern bank of the [[River Lugg]], which flows southward form here to join the [[River Wye|Wye]] just below the city. The Layston Bridge crosses the Lugg at Marden.
'''Marden''' is a village in [[Herefordshire]], seven miles due north of the city of [[Hereford]], in the [[Broxash]] hundred.  It stands on the eastern bank of the [[River Lugg]], which flows southward form here to join the [[River Wye|Wye]] just below the city. The Layston Bridge crosses the Lugg at Marden.


Beside and now indistinguishable from Marden are two hamlets; '''Walker's Green''' and '''Paradise Green'''.  The wider civil parish also includes the hamlet of '''Burmarsh''' to the south of Marden itself.
Beside and now indistinguishable from Marden are two hamlets; '''Walker's Green''' and '''Paradise Green'''.  The wider civil parish also includes the hamlet of '''Burmarsh''' to the south of Marden itself.


Two long distance walking routes, the [[Marches Way]] and the [[Three Rivers Ride]], passes through the village; the Marches Way heading south and across [[Sutton Walls Hill Fort]] and the Three Rivers Ride heading north-east and south-west.
Two long-distance walking routes, the [[Marches Way]] and the [[Three Rivers Ride]], pass through the village; the Marches Way heading south and across [[Sutton Walls Hill Fort]] and the Three Rivers Ride heading north-east and south-west.


==History==
==History==
[[File:Marden, Herefordshire village flag.svg|right|130px|The village flag]]
[[File:Marden, Herefordshire village flag.svg|thumb|250px|The village flag]]
Just south of the village is an Iron Age hill fort known as Sutton Walls.  It is believed that this is the place to which in 794 King Penda of the [[Mercia]]ns lured King Æthelbert of the [[East Anglia]]ns and had him murdered.  Æthelbert was later declared a martyred saint.  The incident inspired the village flag adopted in 2019.
Just south of the village is an Iron Age hill fort known as [[Sutton Walls Hill Fort|Sutton Walls]].  It is believed that this is the place to which in 794 King Penda of the [[Mercia]]ns lured King Æthelbert of the [[East Anglia]]ns and had him murdered.  Æthelbert was later declared a martyred saint.  The incident inspired the [[Town and village flags of the United Kingdom|village flag]] adopted in 2019.


In 1610 the local school was founded by Jane Shelley, the widow of one William Shelley who narrowly escape execution for his part in the Throckmorton Plot of 1583,<ref>[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=6BgGDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA9&lpg=PA9&dq=throckmorton+plot+shelley&source=bl&ots=YlhR3ApD6U&sig=ACfU3U0rwAbxeXwLdqM8Mt1V_gqwdBfHCA&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwijq_Tk_bvjAhXPOcAKHSO0AMQQ6AEwFHoECAkQAQ#v=onepage&q=throckmorton%20plot%20shelley&f=false Art, Literature and Religion in Early Modern Sussex: Culture and Conflict]</ref> which sought to overthrow Queen Elizabeth I by foreign invasion.
In 1610 the local school was founded by Jane Shelley, the widow of one William Shelley who narrowly escape execution for his part in the Throckmorton Plot of 1583,<ref>[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=6BgGDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA9&lpg=PA9&dq=throckmorton+plot+shelley&source=bl&ots=YlhR3ApD6U&sig=ACfU3U0rwAbxeXwLdqM8Mt1V_gqwdBfHCA&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwijq_Tk_bvjAhXPOcAKHSO0AMQQ6AEwFHoECAkQAQ#v=onepage&q=throckmorton%20plot%20shelley&f=false Art, Literature and Religion in Early Modern Sussex: Culture and Conflict]</ref> which sought to overthrow Queen Elizabeth I by foreign invasion.


==Economy==
==Economy==
[[File:Laystone Bridge, Marden (geograph 1858962).jpg|right|thuumb|200px|The Layston Bridge]]
[[File:Laystone Bridge, Marden (geograph 1858962).jpg|right|thumb|250px|The Layston Bridge]]
S and A Produce Ltd, a grower, packer, importer and exporter of soft fruit and asparagus are based in the village.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://corporate.sagroup.co.uk/ | title=About S&A | publisher=S&A Group Holdings Ltd  | access-date=2016-03-14 | quote=}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=http://corporate.sagroup.co.uk/contact-us/ | title=S&A Contact Us | publisher=S&A Group Holdings Ltd  | access-date=2016-03-14 | quote=Head Office: Brook Farm, Marden, Hereford, HR1 3ET}}</ref> An investigation by ''The Independent'' newspaper in 2009 found that the firm had hired more than 2,400 people, predominantly Romanians and Bulgarians to work on its farms in Herefordshire and Kent and paid as little as £45 a week after obligatory charges had been deducted.<ref>{{cite news | last=Taylor  | first=Jerome | title=Revealed: Scandal of Britain's fruit-farm workers | newspaper=The Independent | date=2009-07-09 | url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/revealed-scandal-of-britains-fruit-farm-workers-1740207.html | access-date=2016-03-14}}</ref>
S and A Produce Ltd, a grower, packer, importer and exporter of soft fruit and asparagus are based in the village.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://corporate.sagroup.co.uk/ | title=About S&A | publisher=S&A Group Holdings Ltd  | accessdate=2016-03-14 | quote=}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=http://corporate.sagroup.co.uk/contact-us/ | title=S&A Contact Us | publisher=S&A Group Holdings Ltd  | accessdate=2016-03-14 | quote=Head Office: Brook Farm, Marden, Hereford, HR1 3ET}}</ref> An investigation by ''The Independent'' newspaper in 2009 found that the firm had hired more than 2,400 people, predominantly Romanians and Bulgarians to work on its farms in Herefordshire and Kent and paid as little as £45 a week after obligatory charges had been deducted.<ref>{{cite news | last=Taylor  | first=Jerome | title=Revealed: Scandal of Britain's fruit-farm workers | newspaper=The Independent | date=2009-07-09 | url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/revealed-scandal-of-britains-fruit-farm-workers-1740207.html | accessdate=2016-03-14}}</ref>


==Outside links==
==Outside links==

Latest revision as of 18:35, 18 July 2019

Marden
Herefordshire

Pasture and Marden Church
Location
Grid reference: SO522476
Location: 52°7’29"N, 2°41’59"W
Data
Post town: Hereford
Postcode: HR1
Dialling code: 01432
Local Government
Council: Herefordshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
North Herefordshire

Marden is a village in Herefordshire, seven miles due north of the city of Hereford, in the Broxash hundred. It stands on the eastern bank of the River Lugg, which flows southward form here to join the Wye just below the city. The Layston Bridge crosses the Lugg at Marden.

Beside and now indistinguishable from Marden are two hamlets; Walker's Green and Paradise Green. The wider civil parish also includes the hamlet of Burmarsh to the south of Marden itself.

Two long-distance walking routes, the Marches Way and the Three Rivers Ride, pass through the village; the Marches Way heading south and across Sutton Walls Hill Fort and the Three Rivers Ride heading north-east and south-west.

History

The village flag

Just south of the village is an Iron Age hill fort known as Sutton Walls. It is believed that this is the place to which in 794 King Penda of the Mercians lured King Æthelbert of the East Anglians and had him murdered. Æthelbert was later declared a martyred saint. The incident inspired the village flag adopted in 2019.

In 1610 the local school was founded by Jane Shelley, the widow of one William Shelley who narrowly escape execution for his part in the Throckmorton Plot of 1583,[1] which sought to overthrow Queen Elizabeth I by foreign invasion.

Economy

The Layston Bridge

S and A Produce Ltd, a grower, packer, importer and exporter of soft fruit and asparagus are based in the village.[2][3] An investigation by The Independent newspaper in 2009 found that the firm had hired more than 2,400 people, predominantly Romanians and Bulgarians to work on its farms in Herefordshire and Kent and paid as little as £45 a week after obligatory charges had been deducted.[4]

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Marden, Herefordshire)

References

  1. Art, Literature and Religion in Early Modern Sussex: Culture and Conflict
  2. "About S&A". S&A Group Holdings Ltd. http://corporate.sagroup.co.uk/. Retrieved 2016-03-14. 
  3. "S&A Contact Us". S&A Group Holdings Ltd. http://corporate.sagroup.co.uk/contact-us/. Retrieved 2016-03-14. "Head Office: Brook Farm, Marden, Hereford, HR1 3ET" 
  4. Taylor, Jerome (2009-07-09). "Revealed: Scandal of Britain's fruit-farm workers". The Independent. https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/revealed-scandal-of-britains-fruit-farm-workers-1740207.html. Retrieved 2016-03-14.