Peterborough ( or ) is a
cathedral city and
unitary authority area in the
East of England, with an estimated
population of as of June 2006. For
ceremonial purposes it is in
the
county of
Cambridgeshire.
The Town Hall is north of London
at Charing Cross
. The city stands athwart the River Nene
, which flows into the North Sea
approximately 30 miles (48 km) to the
north-east, and the East Coast Main
Line railway. The local topography is flat and
low-lying, and in some places lies below sea level.
The area known as
the
Fens
falls to the east of Peterborough.
The City
of Peterborough includes the outlying settlement at RAF Wittering
, and as a unitary authority it borders Northamptonshire
and Rutland
to the west,
Lincolnshire
to the north, and Cambridgeshire to the south and
east.
Human
settlement in the area dates back to before the Bronze Age, as can be seen at the Flag Fen
archaeological site to the east of the current city
centre. This site also shows evidence of
Roman occupation.
The Anglo-Saxon period saw the
establishment of a monastery, then known
as Medeshamstede, which later became
Peterborough
Cathedral
. The population grew rapidly following the
arrival of the railways in the nineteenth century, and Peterborough
became an industrial centre, particularly noted for its brick
manufacture. Following the
Second World
War, growth was limited until designation as a
New Town in the 1960s. The
population is once again undergoing rapid expansion and a £1
billion regeneration of the city centre and immediately surrounding
area is under way.
In common with much of the United Kingdom
, industrial employment has fallen, with new jobs
tending to be in financial services and distribution.
History
Early history
Present-day Peterborough is the latest in a series of settlements
which have at one time or other benefited from its situation, where
the Nene leaves permanently drained land for the Fens. Remains of
Bronze Age settlement and what is thought to be religious activity
can be seen at the Flag Fen archaeological site to the east of the
city centre.
The Romans established a fortified garrison
town at Durobrivae
on Ermine
Street
, some five miles (8 km) to the west of the
present city, around the middle of the first century AD.
Durobrivae's earliest appearance among surviving records is in the
Antonine Itinerary of the late
second century.
There was also a large first-century Roman fort at Longthorpe
, designed to house half a legion, or about 3,000 soldiers; it may have been
established as early as around AD 44–48. Peterborough was an
important area of ceramic production in the Roman period, providing
Nene Valley Ware that was traded as far away as Cornwall and the
Antonine
Wall
.
Peterborough is shown by its original name
Medeshamstede to have possibly been an
Anglian settlement before AD 655, when
Saxwulf founded a monastery on land granted
to him for that purpose by Peada of
Mercia
, who was
briefly ruler of the Middle
Angles. The
Peterborough Chronicle, which
contains unique information about the
history of England after the
Norman Conquest, was composed
here in the twelfth century by monks of the
abbey. This is the only known prose history in English
between the conquest and the later fourteenth century. The town's
name changed to
Burgh from the late tenth century,
possibly after Abbot Kenulf had built a
defensive wall around the abbey, and
eventually developed into the form Peterborough; the town does not
appear to have been a
borough until the
twelfth century. The form
Gildenburgh is also found,
though only in local, twelfth century histories of the abbey,
namely the Peterborough version of the
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and a history of
the abbey by the monk Hugh Candidus. The burgesses received their
first charter from "Abbot Robert" — probably Robert of Sutton
(1262–1273).
When
civil war broke out,
Peterborough was divided between supporters of King
Charles I (known as
Cavaliers) and supporters of the
Long Parliament (known as
Roundheads).
The city lay on the border of the Eastern Association of counties which
sided with Parliament, and the war reached Peterborough in 1643
when soldiers arrived in the city to attack Royalist strongholds at
Stamford
and Crowland
. The Royalist forces were defeated within a
few weeks and retreated to Burghley House
, where they were captured and sent to Cambridge
. While the Parliamentary soldiers were in
Peterborough, however, they ransacked the cathedral, destroying the
Lady Chapel,
chapter house,
cloister, high altar and choir stalls, as well as
medieval decoration and records.
Historically the
dean and
chapter, who succeeded the
abbot as
lords of the
manor, appointed a high
bailiff, and the
constables and other borough officers
were elected at their
court leet; but the
municipal borough was
incorporated
in 1874 under the government of a
mayor, six
aldermen and eighteen
councillors. Among the privileges claimed by the
abbot as early as the thirteenth century was that of having a
prison for felons taken in the
Soke. In 1576 Bishop
Edmund Scambler sold the
lordship of the hundred of
Nassaburgh, which was coextensive with the Soke, to Queen
Elizabeth I, who gave it to
Lord Burghley, and from that time
until the nineteenth century he and his descendants, the Earls and
Marquesses of Exeter, had a
separate gaol for prisoners arrested in the Soke. The abbot
formerly held four
fairs, of which two, St.
Peter's Fair, granted in 1189 and later held on the second Tuesday
and Wednesday in July, and the Brigge Fair, granted in 1439 and
later held on the first Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday in October,
were purchased by the
corporation from the
Ecclesiastical Commissioners in
1876. The Bridge Fair, as it is now known, granted to the abbey by
King
Henry VI, survives. Prayers
for the opening of the fair were once said at the morning service
in the cathedral, followed by a civic proclamation and a sausage
lunch at the Town Hall which still takes place. The Mayor
traditionally leads a procession from the Town Hall to the fair
where the proclamation is read, asking all persons to "behave
soberly and civilly, and to pay their just dues and demands
according to the laws of the realm and the rights of the City of
Peterborough."
Modern history
Railway
lines began operating locally during the 1840s, but it was the 1850
opening of the Great Northern
Railway's main line from London
to York
that
transformed Peterborough from a market town to an industrial
centre. Lord Exeter had
opposed the railway passing through Stamford
, so Peterborough, situated between two main
terminals at London and Doncaster
, increasingly developed as a regional hub.

Burghley House (1555–1587), seat of
the Marquess of Exeter, hereditary Lord Paramount of
Peterborough
Coupled with vast local clay deposits, the railway enabled
large-scale brick-making and distribution to take place. The area
was the UK's leading producer of bricks for much of the twentieth
century.
Brick-making had been a small seasonal craft
since the early nineteenth century, but during the 1890s successful
experiments at Fletton
using the harder clays from a lower level had
resulted in a much more efficient process. The dominance of
London Brick in the market during this period gave rise to some of
the country's most well-known landmarks, all built using the
ubiquitous Fletton.
Perkins Engines
was established in Peterborough in 1932 by
Frank Perkins, creator of the Perkins diesel
engine.
Thirty years later it employed more than a
tenth of the population of Peterborough, mainly at Eastfield
. Baker Perkins had relocated from London to
Westwood
, now the site of HMP
Peterborough
, in 1903, followed by Peter Brotherhood to Walton
in 1906; both manufacturers of industrial
machinery, they too became major employers in the city.
British Sugar remains headquartered in
Woodston
, although the beet sugar
factory, which opened there in 1926, was closed in
1991.
Designated a
New
Town in 1967,
Peterborough Development
Corporation was formed in partnership with the city and county
councils to house London's
overspill population in new
townships sited around the existing urban
area.
There were to be four townships, one each at
Bretton
, Orton, Paston
/Werrington
and Castor
. The last of these was never built, but a
fourth, called Hampton
, is now taking shape south of the city. It
was decided that the city should have a major indoor shopping
centre at its heart.
Planning permission was received in late
summer 1976 and Queensgate
, containing over 90 stores and including parking
for 2,300 cars, was opened by Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands in
1982. 34 miles (55 km) of urban roads were planned and
a network of high-speed roads, known as
parkways, was
constructed.
Peterborough's population grew by 45.4% between 1971 and 1991. New
service-sector companies like
Thomas
Cook and Pearl Assurance were attracted to the city, ending the
dominance of the manufacturing industry as employers.
An urban regeneration company named
Opportunity Peterborough,
under the chairmanship of Lord Mawhinney, was set up by the
Office of the Deputy Prime
Minister
in 2005 to oversee Peterborough's future
development. Between 2006 and 2012 a £1 billion
redevelopment of the city centre and surrounding areas is planned.
The master plan provides guidelines on the physical shaping of the
city centre over the next 15–20 years. Proposals are already
progressing for the north of Westgate, the south bank and the
station quarter, where
Network Rail is
preparing a major mixed use development. Whilst recognising that
the reconfiguration of the relationship between the city and
station was critical,
English
Heritage found the current plans for Westgate unconvincing and
felt more thought should be given to the vitality of the historic
core.
Administration
Politics
The city
formed a parliamentary borough
returning two members from
1541, with the rest of the Soke being part of Northamptonshire
parliamentary county. The
Great Reform Act did not affect the
borough, although the remaining, rural portion of the Soke was
transferred to the northern division of Northamptonshire. In 1885
the borough's representation was reduced to one member, and in 1918
the boundaries were adjusted to include the whole Soke.
The
serving member for Peterborough
is the Conservative, Stewart Jackson MP, who
defeated Labour's Helen Clark in the 2005 general
election. In 1997 the North West Cambridgeshire
constituency was formed, incorporating parts of the
city and neighbouring Huntingdonshire. The serving member is
the
Conservative,
Shailesh Vara MP, who succeeded
the (then)
Rt Hon Dr. Sir
Brian Mawhinney, former
Secretary of State for
Transport and
Chairman of the Conservative
Party, in 2005. Mawhinney, who had previously served as Member
of Parliament for Peterborough from 1979, was created
Baron Mawhinney of Peterborough in the county of
Cambridgeshire later that year.
Peterborough and North West Cambridgeshire
are included in the East of
England constituency for elections to
the European
Parliament
. It currently elects seven
members using the
d'Hondt method of
party-list proportional
representation.
Local government

The Town Hall, Peterborough
(1930–1933)
From 1889 the ancient
Soke of
Peterborough formed an
administrative county in
its own right with boundaries similar, although not identical, to
the current unitary authority.
The area however remained geographically
part of Northamptonshire
until 1965, when the Soke of Peterborough was
merged with Huntingdonshire
to form the county of Huntingdon and
Peterborough. Following a review of local government in
1974, Huntingdon and Peterborough was abolished and the current
district created by the merger
of the Municipal Borough of Peterborough with Peterborough
Rural District,
Barnack
Rural District
, Thorney Rural District
, Old Fletton
Urban District and
part of the Norman Cross Rural District
, which had each existed since 1894. This
became part of the
non-metropolitan
county of
Cambridgeshire.
Letters patent were granted which
continued the style of the
city over the greater
area. In 1998 the city became autonomous of Cambridgeshire
county council as a
unitary authority, but it continues to
form part of that
county for
ceremonial purposes.
The leader and cabinet model of decision-making, first adopted by
the
city council in 2001, is similar to
national government.
Policing in the city
remains the responsibility of
Cambridgeshire Constabulary; and
firefighting, the
responsibility of
Cambridgeshire Fire and
Rescue Service. Nowadays the
Peterborough Volunteer Fire
Brigade, one of few of its kind, effectively functions as a
retained fire station. The
Royal
Anglian Regiment serves as the county regiment for
Cambridgeshire. Peterborough formed its first territorial army
unit, the 6th Northamptonshire Rifle Volunteer Corps, in
1860.
Health service
NHS Peterborough, the public-facing name of Peterborough
Primary Care Trust, guides primary care
services (general practitioners, dentists, opticians and
pharmacists) in the city, directly provides adult social care and
services in the community such as
health
visiting and
physiotherapy and
also funds hospital care and other specialist treatments.
Peterborough and Stamford Hospitals
NHS Foundation Trust is one of the
country's top performing acute trusts and, in 2004, became one of
the first ten
English
NHS foundation trusts. A £300 million health investment plan
will see the transfer of the city's two hospitals to a single site
by building a modern, flexible facility more suited to modern
healthcare.
The full planning application for the
redevelopment of the Edith Cavell Hospital
was approved by the council in 2006.
Planning permission for the development of an integrated care
centre on the existing site of the Fenland Wing at Peterborough
District Hospital was granted in 2003.
Cambridgeshire and
Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust, a designated University
of Cambridge
teaching trust, provides services to those who
suffer from mental health problems. Following merger of the
Cambridgeshire, then East Anglian Ambulance Services, the
East of England Ambulance
Service NHS Trust is responsible for the provision of statutory
emergency
medical services in Peterborough.
Public utilities
The council's budget for the financial year 2009/10 is £247.9
million. The main source of non-school funding is the formula
grant, which is paid by government to local authorities based on
the services they provide. The remainder, to which the
police and
fire authorities (and parish council where
this exists) set a precept, is raised from
council tax and
business rates.
Mains
water and sewerage services are provided by Anglian Water, a former nationalised industry and natural monopoly, privatised in 1989 and regulated by OFWAT
.
Following deregulation, the consumer has a choice of energy
supplier.
Electricity was formerly
provided by
Eastern Electricity,
which was privatised in 1990. In 2002 the
supply business was sold to
Powergen and the
distribution rights sold to
EDF Energy.
Natural gas was (and still is) supplied by
British Gas, which was
privatised in 1986. Distribution and, as with electricity,
transmission, is the responsibility
of the
National Grid, having been
demerged as Transco in 1997. These industries are regulated by
OFGEM.
Peterborough Power Station
is a 360 MWe gas-fired plant in Fengate
operated by Centrica
Energy.
British
Telecommunications, privatised in 1984, provides fixed
ADSL enabled
(8 Mbit/s) telephone lines. The
subscriber trunk dialling code for
Peterborough is
01733, deriving
from 73 for PE.
Local loop
unbundling, giving other
internet service providers direct
access, is completed at four out of 12
exchanges. The city is cabled by
Virgin Media.
These businesses are
regulated by OFCOM
.
Economy
Regeneration
Peterborough is currently experiencing an economic boom compared to
the rest of the country, believed in part to be due to the
regeneration plan running to 2012. In 2005 economic growth was on
average 5.5%, whilst in Peterborough it was 6.9%, the highest in
the UK.
This is a chart of trend of regional
gross value added, an important measure in
the estimation of
gross domestic
product, of Peterborough at current basic prices, with figures
in millions of
pounds sterling:
| Year |
Regional GVA |
Agriculture |
Industry |
Services |
| 1995 |
1,821 |
16 |
552 |
1,254 |
| 2000 |
2,387 |
12 |
580 |
1,795 |
| 2003 |
2,932 |
15 |
727 |
2,189 |
Recent figures, plotting growth from 1995 to 2004, reveal that
Peterborough has become the most successful economy among unitary
authorities in the East of England. The chart also reveals that the
city's economy is growing faster than the East of England average
and any other economy in the region. Peterborough leads the UK’s
business population growth, with a 3.78% increase between April and
September 2006, according to
Royal Mail's
Business Barometer. It has a strong economy in the environmental
goods and services sector and has the largest cluster of
environmental businesses in the UK.In 1994 Peterborough was
designated one of four environment cities in the UK and it is now
working to become the UK's acknowledged environment capital. The
council and
regional
development agency are taking advice on regeneration issues
from a number of internationally recognised experts, including
Benjamin Barber (formerly an adviser
to President
Bill Clinton),
Jan Gustav Strandenaes (
United Nations adviser on environmental
issues) and
Patama Roorakwit (a
Thai "community architect").
Employment
According to the
2001
census, the workplace population of 90,656 is divided into
60,118 people who live in Peterborough and 30,358 people who
commute in. A further 13,161 residents commute out of the city to
work. Earnings in Peterborough are lower than average.
Median earnings are £9.77 per hour, less than the
regional median of £11.69 and the national median hourly rate of
£11.26.
As part of the government's M11 corridor
, Peterborough is committed to creating 17,500 jobs
with the population growing to 200,000 by 2020.
Future employment will also be created through the plan for the
city centre launched by the council in 2003. Predictions of the
levels and types of employment created were published in 2005.
These include 1,421 jobs created in retail; 1,067 created in a
variety of leisure and cultural developments; 338 in three hotels;
and a further 4,847 jobs created in offices and other workspaces.
Recent
relocations of large employers include both Tesco
(1,070
employees) and Debenhams (850 employees)
distribution centres. A further 2,500 jobs are to be created
in the £140 million Gateway warehouse and distribution park, this
is expected to compensate for the 6,000 job losses as a result of
the decline in manufacturing, anticipated in a report cited by the
cabinet member for economic growth and regeneration in 2006.
With traditionally low levels of unemployment, Peterborough is a
popular destination for workers and has seen significant growth
through migration since the post-war period.
The leader of the
council said he believed Peterborough had taken up to 80% of the
65,000 people who had arrived in East Anglia
from the Baltic
states. To help cope with this influx the council has
put forward plans to construct an average of 1,300 homes each year
until 2021. Demand for short term employees remains high and the
market supports up to 20 high street recruitment agencies at any
given time.
Transport
Peterborough
is a major stop on the East Coast Main Line, 45–50
minutes' journey time from central London, with high-speed
intercity services from King's Cross
to Edinburgh Waverley
operated by the East Coast Main Line
Company at around a 20-minute frequency, and slower commuter
services terminating at Peterborough operated by First Capital Connect. It is a
major railway junction where a number of cross-country routes
converge.
East
Midlands Trains operate the Peterborough to Lincoln Line,
with through services to Doncaster and a route from Liverpool
Lime Street
to Norwich
or Cambridge via the main line north of
Peterborough; CrossCountry operate the
Birmingham to
Peterborough Line and with National Express East Anglia,
the Ely to Peterborough
Line, with through services to Cambridge and Stansted
Airport
operated by the former and to Ipswich
and London Liverpool Street
by the latter. Peterborough has a
business
airport
with a paved runway at Holme
and a recreational airfield
hosting a parachute school at Sibson
.
The
River
Nene
, made navigable from the port at Wisbech
to Northampton
by 1761, passes through the city centre and a green
bridge carries the railway over the river. It was built in
1847 by
Lewis Cubitt, who was more
famous for his bridges in Australia, India and South America. Apart
from some minor repairs in 1910 (the steel bands and cross braces
around the fluted legs) the bridge remains as he built it. Now a
listed structure, it is the oldest surviving cast-iron railway
bridge in the UK. By the Town Bridge, the Customs House, built in
the early eighteenth century, is a visible reminder of the city's
past function as an inland port.
The Environment Agency navigation starts at
the junction with the Northampton arm of the Grand Union
Canal
and extends for 91 miles (147 km) ending at
Bevis Hall just upstream of Wisbech. The tidal limit used to
be Woodston Wharf until the Dog-in-a-Doublet
lock was built five miles (8 km)
downstream in 1937.
The
A1/A1(M) broadly follows the path of the historic Great North
Road
from St Paul's Cathedral
in the heart of London, through Peterborough
(Junction 17), continuing north a further 335 miles (539 km)
to central Edinburgh
. In 1899 the
British Electric Traction Company
sought permission for a
tramway joining the
northern suburbs with the city centre. The system, which operated
under the name Peterborough Electric Traction Company, opened in
1903 and was abandoned in favour of motor buses in 1930, when the
company was merged into the
Eastern Counties Omnibus
Company. Today, bus services in the city are operated by
several companies including the
Stagecoach Group (
Cambus and Viscount) and
Delaine Buses. Despite its large-scale growth,
Peterborough has the fastest peak and off-peak travel times for a
city of its size in the UK, due to the construction of the
parkways. The
Local Transport
Plan anticipates expenditure totalling around £180 million for
the period up to 2010 on major road schemes to accommodate
development.
The Peterborough Millennium
Green Wheel
is a 50-mile (80 km) network of cycleways, footpaths and
bridleways which provide safe, continuous routes around the city
with radiating spokes connecting to the city centre. The project
has also created a sculpture trail, which provides functional,
landscape artworks along the Green Wheel route and a Living
Landmarks project involving the local community in the creation of
local landscape features such as mini woodlands, ponds and
hedgerows.
Another long-distance footpath, the Hereward Way, runs from Oakham
in
Rutland
, through
Peterborough, to East
Harling
in Norfolk.
Demographics
Ethnicity
Peterborough is home to one of the largest concentrations of
Italian immigrants in the UK.
This is
mainly as a result of labour recruitment
in the 1950s by the London Brick
Company in the southern Italian
regions of Puglia
and
Campania. By 1960 approximately
3,000 Italian men were employed by London Brick, mostly at the
Fletton
works. In 1962 the
Scalabrini Fathers, who
first arrived in 1956, purchased an old school and converted it
into a church named after the
patron
saint of workers
San Giuseppe. By
1991 over 3,000
christenings of
second-generation Italians had been carried out there. The
population of Peterborough has grown much faster than the national
average over the last few years, mainly as a result of immigration.
In the
late twentieth century the main source of immigration has been from
Commonwealth countries such
as India
and
Pakistan
. A more recent issue is that an unknown
number of eastern Europeans from
accession states have moved to Peterborough
since 2004. This may mean that the population figures, based on the
2001 census, are an
underestimate. The
East of England Regional
Assembly estimate that 16,000 eastern Europeans are now living
in the city, one in ten of the population. Modern Peterborough is a
rapidly developing city and one that continues to change. The
change has not been without problems however.
In May 2004 groups of
Pakistani residents clashed with Afghan and Iraqi
asylum seekers. In the "running street
battles," houses and cars were set alight and windows were smashed.
Some people were hospitalised.
The fighting occurred in the multicultural
Millfield
area of the city. In July of that year,
a festival set up by the Indian community to celebrate the city's
diversity turned violent. Pakistanis and Iraqis clashed over the
weekend, leaving a man in hospital and large gangs fighting. Since
then, race relations have improved significantly.
East Anglia is the leading destination for new migrants and half of
the 83,000 who have registered to work in the region have settled
in Cambridgeshire. According to a report published by the police in
2007 "the hidden scale of migration into the county is demonstrated
by the different number of languages officers and staff deal with,
which now exceeds 100.
Translation costs
linked to dealing with incidents and crime are close to £1 million
a year." The report says the migrant communities have led to a
change in the nature of crime in the county, with an increase in
drink-driving offences,
knife crime and an international dimension added to activities such
as running
cannabis factories and
human trafficking. The number of
foreign nationals arrested in the north of the county rose from 894
in 2003 to 2,435 in 2006, but the report also says "inappropriately
negative" community perceptions about migrant workers often
complicate routine incidents, raising tensions and turning them
"critical;" the fact that many new migrants are crowded into
privately rented accommodation, often in multiple occupation, is a
potentially destabilising factor in many communities, raising
problems of
noise, parking, waste
disposal, petty
robbery, household disputes
and
assaults against women in mixed houses.
Julie Spence OBE, the
Chief
Constable, was careful to add there was "little evidence that
the increased numbers of migrant workers have caused significant or
systematic problems in respect of community safety or cohesion."
She also emphasised that the dramatic change in the county's
profile — from a rural county in which four years ago 95% of
teenagers were
white to one of the
country's major ethnically mixed growth points — has had a positive
impact in development and jobs. Cambridgeshire's population is one
of the fastest growing in Britain and is projected to rise by a
further 12.5% or 94,000 by 2016, mostly fulled by 69,000 eastern
European migrants. On 11 March 2008, the
BBC
broadcast
The Poles are Coming!, a controversial
documentary by award-winning filmmaker
Tim
Samuels, as part of its
White Season. June 2007
estimates by the
Office of
National Statistics give the following percentage break down
into broad ethnic groups: 86.8% White, 8.2% Asian or Asian British,
2.1% Black or Black British, 1.1% Chinese or Other, and 1.8% Mixed
Race.
The number of languages in use is growing and diversity is
spreading where previously few languages other than
English were spoken. Peterborough now
offers classes in
Italian,
Urdu and
Punjabi in its
primary schools. As the city expands the council has introduced a
new statutory development plan. Its aim is to accommodate an
additional 22,000 homes, 18,000 jobs and over 40,000 people living
in Peterborough by 2020.
The newly developing Hampton
township will be completed, there will be a 1,500
home development at Stanground
and a further 1,200 home development at
Paston
.
Religion

Norman gateway below the chapel of St.
Nicholas (1177–1194), Minster Precincts
Christianity has the largest following
in Peterborough, in particular the
Church of England, with a significant
number of parish churches and a cathedral. Recent immigration to
the city has also seen the established
Roman Catholic population increase
substantially. Other
denominations are also in evidence;
the latest church to be constructed is a £7 million "superchurch,"
KingsGate, formerly
Peterborough Community Church, which can seat up to 1,800
worshippers. In comparison with the rest of the country,
Peterborough has a lower proportion of
Christians,
Buddhists,
Hindus,
Jews and
Sikhs. However, the city has a higher percentage of
Muslims and people with no religion than the
national average.
The majority of Muslims reside in the
Millfield
and New England
areas of the city, where two large mosques
(including the Faidhan-e-Madina Mosque
) are based. Peterborough also has both
Hindu (Bharat Hindu Samaj) and Sikh (Singh Sabha Gurdwara) temples
in these areas.
The
Anglican Diocese of
Peterborough
covers roughly 1,200 square miles (3,100 km²),
including the whole of Northamptonshire, Rutland, and the Soke of
Peterborough (the area to the north of the River Nene).
Historically in
Huntingdonshire, the parts of the city south of the river fall
within the Diocese of
Ely
, which covers the remainder of Cambridgeshire and
western Norfolk. However, the current
Bishop of Peterborough has been
appointed
Assistant Bishop in the
Diocese of Ely, with pastoral care for these
parishes delegated to him by the
Bishop of Ely.
The city falls wholly within the Roman Catholic Diocese of
East Anglia
, which has its seat at the Cathedral
Church
of Saint John the
Baptist, Norwich.
Culture
Education
Peterborough has one independent boarding
school; Peterborough High School
, formerly Westwood House. The school
caters for girls up to 18 and boys up to 11. Peterborough's state
schools are currently undergoing immense change. Five of the city's
15
secondary schools were closed
in July 2007 and are to be demolished over the coming years.
John
Mansfield
, Hereward (formerly Eastholm) and Deacon's
were replaced with the flagship Thomas
Deacon Academy
, designed by Lord Foster of Thames
Bank which opened in September 2007. The Voyager
School
, which has specialist media arts status, replaced
Bretton Woods and Walton comprehensive. The schools that
remain will be extended and enlarged. Over £200 million is to be
spent and the changes on-going to 2010.
The King's
School
is one of seven schools established, or in some
cases re-endowed and renamed, by King Henry VIII during the Dissolution of the
Monasteries to pray for his soul. In 2006, 39.4% of
Peterborough
local education
authority pupils attained five grades A* to C, including
English and Mathematics, in the
General Certificate
of Secondary Education, lower than the national average of
45.8%.
The city
has its own Further Education
colleges, Peterborough Regional College
(established in 1946 as Peterborough Technical
College) and Peterborough College of Adult Education.
Peterborough Regional College attracts over 15,000 students each
year from the UK and abroad and is currently ranked in the top five
per cent of colleges in the UK.
The city
is currently without a university, since Loughborough
University
closed its Peterborough campus in 2003.
Consequently it is the second largest centre
of population in the UK (after Swindon
) without its own higher education
institution. In 2006 however, Peterborough Regional
College was in talks with Anglia Ruskin University
to develop a new university campus for the
city. The college and the university have now officially
completed the legal contracts for the creation of a new joint
venture company. The formation marks the culmination of legal
negotiations and securing of funds required in order to build the
new higher education centre.
The arts
Peterborough enjoys a wide range of events
including the annual East of England Show, Peterborough Festival and CAMRA
beer
festival, which takes place on the river embankment in late
August.
The Key Theatre, built in 1973, is situated on the embankment, next
to the River Nene. The theatre aims to provide entertainment,
enlightenment and education by reflecting the rich culture
Peterborough has to offer. The programme is made up of home-grown
productions, national touring shows, local community productions
and one-off concerts. There is disabled access, an infrared hearing
system for the deaf and hard of hearing and there are also regular
signed performances. In 1937 the
Odeon
Cinema opened on Broadway, where it operated successfully for
more than half a century. In 1991 the Odeon showed its last film to
the public and was left to fall into a state of disrepair, until
1997, when a local entrepreneur purchased the building as part of a
larger project, including a restaurant and art gallery. The
Broadway, designed by Tim Foster Architects, was one of the largest
theatres in the region and offered a selection of live
entertainment, including music, comedy and films. In January 2009,
it was severely damaged by arsonists, resulting in closure when its
insurers refused to pay the claim due to faulty fire detection
systems. The Embassy Theatre, now a public house, also opened here
in 1937, later becoming a cinema. The John Clare Theatre within the
new central library, again on Broadway, is home to the Peterborough
Film Society.
One of the region's leading venues, The
Cresset in Bretton
, provides a wide range of events for the residents
of the city and beyond, including theatre, comedy, music and
dance. Peterborough has a 13-screen
Showcase Cinema, an ice rink and two indoor
swimming pools open to the general public. A diverse range of
restaurants can be found throughout the city, including
Chinese &
Cantonese,
Indian &
Nepalese,
Thai and many
Italian restaurants.
In the closing months
of 2006, Polish, Japanese and Mexican
restaurants were all opened.
A regional magazine, Art and Soul, encouraging the arts and local
music was started in 2007. The magazine covers many aspects of the
Peterborough arts and music scene, including organising gigs in the
city. Peterborough has recently been used as the setting for two
popular novels,
A Short History of
Tractors in Ukrainian by
Marina
Lewycka and
A Spot of
Bother by
Mark Haddon.
Sport
Peterborough United
Football Club, known as
The Posh, has been the local
football team since 1934.
The ground is situated at London
Road
on the south bank of the River Nene
. Peterborough United have a proud history of
cup giant-killings. They set the record for the highest number of
league goals (134,
Terry Bly alone scoring
52) in 1960/1; their first season in the
Football League, in which they won the
Fourth Division
title. The club's highest standing to date was tenth place in the
First Division, then
the second tier of English football, in 1992/3. Irish property
developer
Darragh MacAnthony was
appointed chairman in 2006 and is now owner, having undertaken a
lengthy purchase from
Barry Fry who
remains director of football. MacAnthony has promised to move
The Posh to a new all-seater stadium.
As well as
football,
Peterborough has teams competing in
rugby,
cricket,
hockey,
ice hockey,
rowing and
athletics. Although
Cambridgeshire is not a
first-class cricket county,
Northamptonshire staged
some home matches in the city between 1906 and 1974. Peterborough
Town Cricket Club and the City of Peterborough Hockey Club compete
at their shared ground in Westwood; whereas the city's oldest and
most successful rugby team, Peterborough Rugby Union Football Club,
now play at Fortress Fengate.
Peterborough City Rowing Club moved from its riverside setting to
the current Thorpe Meadows location in 1983. The spring and summer
regattas held there attract rowers and scullers from competing
clubs all over the country. Every February the adjacent River Nene
is host to the head of the river race, which again attracts
hundreds of entries. Peterborough Athletic Club train and compete
at the embankment athletics arena. In 2006, after 10 years, the
Great Eastern Run returned to the racing calendar, around 3,000
runners raced through the flat streets of Peterborough for the
half-marathon, supported by thousands of spectators along the
course.
Peterborough Phantoms are the
city's ice hockey team, playing in the
English Premier League at
the East of England Ice Rink.
Motorcycle speedway is also a popular
sport in Peterborough, with race meetings held at the East of
England Showground. The team, known as the
Peterborough Panthers, have operated
regularly in the
Elite League.
The Showground hosts the annual British Motorcycle Federation Rally
each May. In June 2009, Peterborough will host one of the first
rounds of The Tour Series, a new series of televised town and city
centre cycling races.
Media
There is
a major radio transmitter
at Morborne
, approximately eight miles (13 km) west of
Peterborough, for national FM radio
(BBC Radios 1–4 and Classic FM) and BBC Radio Cambridgeshire.
This facility includes a 505 feet (154 m) high guyed radio
mast which collapsed in 2004 after a fire and has since been
re-built.
Another transmission site at Gunthorpe
in the north east of the city transmits
AM/MW and local
FM radio. The site is only 10 feet (3 m) above sea
level and has a 270 feet (83 m) high active insulated guyed
mast situated on it.
Peterborough has four local radio stations and one regional
station.
Heart Peterborough,
formerly Hereward FM, the original
independent local radio station,
still holds a large section of the market on 102.7 MHz.
Hereward's sister station,
Classic
Gold 1332, is now part of the national
Classic Gold network;
Lite FM 106.8 is the second commercial radio
station and Radio Cambridgeshire, which also has a studio in the
city, broadcasts local output in place of countywide programming on
95.7 MHz at peak listening times.
Kiss
105-108 is the regional station for the East of England,
broadcasting on 107.7 MHz in Peterborough.
NOW Peterborough is the local
DAB multiplex;
BBC National DAB and the national
commercial multiplex,
Digital One, are
also available in the city. Peterborough is in the
Anglia Television transmission area for
ITV, with a small studio in the city (although
it borders
ITV Central).
This is broadcast
with BBC One
and Two , Channel 4 and Channel
5 from Sandy
Heath
. The
digital switchover
will take place in 2011 in the East of England. Shopping channel
Ideal World is broadcast nationwide from
studios in Fengate, Peterborough.
The
Peterborough
Evening Telegraph or
ET (established 1948) is the
city's newspaper, published Monday to Saturday with jobs, property,
motors and entertainment supplements. The Evening Telegraph is now
owned by East Midlands Newspapers Ltd., part of
Johnston Press Plc of Edinburgh. Its website,
Peterborough Today, is updated six days a week. The
ET's
sister paper, the
Peterborough Citizen (1898), is a weekly
paper delivered free to many homes in the city. The
Peterborough Herald and
Post (1989, a replacement for the
Peterborough
Standard, established 1872) ceased publication in 2008. The
publisher
Emap, which specialises in the
production of magazines and the organisation of business events and
conferences, traces its origins back to Peterborough in 1854. As
Mayor of Peterborough, Sir
Richard
Winfrey founder of what would become the East Midland Allied
Press, was perhaps the last person to read the
Riot Act in 1914.
Peterborough has been used as a location for various television
programmes and films. In 1995
Pierce
Brosnan OBE filmed train
crash sequences for the 17th
James Bond
film,
GoldenEye, at the former sugar beet
factory. In 1983 opening scenes for the 13th 007 film,
Octopussy, starring Sir
Roger Moore, were filmed at Orton Mere.
A music
video for the song BreakThru by the
band Queen was also shot on the
preserved Nene
Valley Railway
in 1989. A scene for the film
The Da Vinci Code was filmed at
Burghley House during five weeks secret filming in 2006; and actor,
Lee Marvin, found himself camping in
Ferry Meadows during the filming of
The
Dirty Dozen: Next Mission in 1985. In October 2008 Hollywood
returned to Wansford for the filming of the musical
Nine, starring
Penelope
Cruz and
Daniel
Day-Lewis.
Places of interest

Longthorpe Tower (1310), a Grade I
listed building
The Cathedral Church of
Saint Peter,
Saint Paul and
Saint Andrew, whose statues look down from the
three high gables of the West Front, was originally founded as a
monastery in AD 655 and re-built in
its present form between 1118 and 1238. It has been the seat of the
Bishop of Peterborough since
the
Diocese was created in 1541.
Peterborough
Cathedral
is known for its imposing early English Gothic West Front which,
with its three enormous arches, is without architectural
precedent and with no direct successor. The Cathedral
has the distinction of having had two queens buried beneath its
paving,
Katherine of Aragon and
Mary, Queen of Scots.
The
remains of Queen Mary were later removed to Westminster Abbey
by her son James
I when he became King of England.
The general layout of Peterborough is attributed to Martin de Vecti
who, as abbot from 1133 to 1155, rebuilt the settlement on dry
limestone to the west of the monastery, rather than the
often-flooded marshlands to the east. Abbot Martin was responsible
for laying out the market place and the wharf beside the river.
Peterborough's magnificent seventeenth century Guildhall, built
shortly after the
restoration of
King
Charles II, is supported
by columns, to provide an open ground floor for the butter and
poultry markets which used to be held there. The Market Place was
renamed Cathedral Square and the adjacent Gates Memorial Fountain
moved to Bishop's Road Gardens in 1963, when the weekly market was
transferred to the site of the old cattle market. The city has a
large
Victorian park containing formal
gardens, children's play areas, an aviary, bowling green, tennis
courts, pitch and putt course and tea rooms. The Park has been
awarded the
Green Flag Award, the
national standard for parks and green spaces, by the
Civic Trust.
The
Lido, a striking building with elements of
art deco design, was opened in 1936 and is one of
the few survivors of its type still in use.

Peterborough Museum and Art Gallery,
built in 1816, housed the city's first infirmary from 1857 to 1928.
The museum has a collection of some 227,000 objects, including
local archaeology and social history, from the products of the
Roman pottery industry to Britain's oldest known murder victim; a
collection of marine fossil remains from the
Jurassic period of international importance; the
manuscripts of
John Clare, the
Northamptonshire Peasant Poet as he was commonly known in
his own time; and the Norman Cross collection of items made by
French prisoners of war.
These prisoners were kept at Norman Cross
on the outskirts of Peterborough from 1797 to 1814,
in what is believed to be the world's first purpose built prisoner
of war camp. The art collection contains an impressive
variety of paintings, prints and drawings dating from the 1600s to
the present day. Peterborough Museum also holds regular temporary
exhibitions, weekend events and guided tours.
Burghley House
to the north of Peterborough, near Stamford, was
built and mostly designed by
Sir William Cecil, later
1st Baron Burghley, who was
Lord
High Treasurer to Queen
Elizabeth I for most of her reign.
The
country house, with a park laid
out by
Lancelot 'Capability'
Brown in the eighteenth century, is one of the principal
examples of sixteenth century English architecture. The estate,
still home to his descendants, hosts the
Burghley Horse Trials, an annual three
day
event.
Another Grade I listed building, Milton Hall
near Castor, ancestral home of the Barons and later
Earls Fitzwilliam, also dates from
the same period. For two centuries following the restoration
the city was a
pocket borough of this
family.
Longthorpe Tower
, a fourteenth century three-storey tower and
fortified manor house in the care of
English Heritage, is situated about two
miles (3 km) west of the city centre. A
scheduled ancient monument protected by
law, it contains the finest and most complete set of domestic
paintings of the period in northern Europe.
Nearby Thorpe Hall
is one of the few mansions built in the Commonwealth period. A
maternity hospital from 1943 to 1970, it was acquired by the
Sue Ryder Foundation in 1986
and is currently in use as a hospice.
Flag Fen
, the
Bronze Age
archaeological site, was discovered in 1982 when a team led by Dr.
Francis Pryor carried out a
survey of
dykes in the area.
Probably religious,
it comprises a large number of poles arranged in five long rows,
connecting Whittlesey
with Peterborough across the wet fenland.
The museum exhibits many of the artefacts found, including what is
believed to be the oldest wheel in Britain.
An exposed section of
the Roman road known as the Fen Causeway
also crosses the site.

The
Nene
Valley Railway
, a seven and a half mile (12 km)
heritage railway, was one of the last
passenger lines to fall under the
Beeching
Axe.
In 1974 the former development corporation bought the
line, running from the city centre to Yarwell Junction
just west of Wansford
, via Orton
Mere
and the 500 acre (202 ha) Ferry
Meadows
country park, and leased it to the Peterborough
Railway Society.

The
Nene
Park
, which opened in 1978, covers a site three and a
half miles (5.6 km) long, from slightly west of Castor to the
centre of Peterborough. The park has three lakes, one of which
houses a watersports centre. Ferry Meadows, one of the major
destinations and attractions signposted on the
Green Wheel, occupies a large portion of Nene
Park. Orton Mere provides access to the east of the park.

Southey Wood, once included in
the Royal
Forest of
Rockingham
, is a mixed woodland maintained by the
Forestry Commission between the villages
of Upton and Ufford.
Nearby, Castor Hanglands
, Barnack Hills and Holes
and Bedford Purlieus
national nature
reserves are each sites of special scientific
interest. In 2002 the Hills and Holes, one of
Natural England's 35 spotlight reserves, was
designated a
special area
of conservation as part of the
Natura
2000 network of sites throughout the
European Union.
Famous Peterborians
The City of Peterborough (including its outlying villages) is the
birthplace of many notable people, including the astronomer
George Alcock MBE, one of the most successful visual
discoverers of
novas and
comets;
John Clare, from
Helpston, now considered to be one of the most important poets of
the nineteenth century; artist,
Christopher Perkins; and Sir
Henry Royce, 1st
Baronet
of Seaton, engineer and co-founder of
Rolls-Royce. Physician, actor and author,
Sir
John Hill, credited with 76
separate works in the
Dictionary of National
Biography, the most valuable of which dealing with
botany, is also said to have been born in
Peterborough. The socialist writer and illustrator,
Frank Horrabin, who was born in the city, was
elected its member of parliament in 1929.
The
utilitarian philosopher,
Richard Cumberland, was
14th Lord Bishop of Peterborough from 1691 until his death in 1718;
and Norfolk-born nurse and
humanitarian,
Edith
Cavell, who received part of her education at Laurel Court in
the Minster Precinct, is commemorated by a plaque in the Cathedral
and by the name of the hospital. Two prominent historical figures
were born locally,
Hereward the
Wake, an outlaw who led resistance to the
Norman Conquest and now lends his
name to several places and businesses in Peterborough; and St.
John Payne, one of the group of
prominent Catholics
martyred between 1535
and 1679 and later designated the
Forty Martyrs of England and
Wales, who was
beatified by
Pope Leo XIII in 1886 and
canonised with the other 39 by
Pope Paul VI in 1970.
Musicians
include Sir Thomas Armstrong,
organist, conductor and former principal of the Royal
Academy of Music
; Andy Bell, lead
vocalist of the electronic pop duo Erasure; Barrie Forgie, leader of the BBC Big Band; Don
Lusher OBE, trombonist and
former professor of the Royal College of Music
and the Royal Marines
School of Music; Paul Nicholas, actor
and singer; Keith Palmer, better known as Maxim Reality, MC with dance act The Prodigy
— Graham 'Gizz' Butt, who played live
guitar with The Prodigy, lives in the area — Nigel Sixsmith, keytar
player and founder member of The Art Of
Sound; Skins actor Luke Pasqualino;. Jonathan Gill
(Arishay) and his fellow bandmate
Aston
Merrygold, who is lead singer of
The X Factor runners-up
JLS are also from Peterborough.
Other living personalities include television presenter,
Sarah Cawood, who grew up in Maxey; actor,
Luke Pasqualino; and presenter,
Jake Humphrey who was born in the
city.
Adrian Durham, football
journalist and radio broadcaster; and biologist, author and
broadcaster, Prof.
Brian J. Ford, who attended the King's School and still
lives in Eastrea near Whittlesey. Local businessman Peter Boizot
MBE OMRI, founder of the
Pizza Express restaurant chain, has
supported the cultural and sporting life of Peterborough and
received its highest accolade, the freedom of the city.
Tottenham Hotspur and
England footballer,
David Bentley, was born in the city; and
Stoke City midfielder,
Matthew Etherington, started his career
in the youth academy at Peterborough United; in the same team was
Simon Davies,
with whom Etherington made a joint transfer to Tottenham Hotspur.
Former England goalkeeper,
David Seaman
MBE, also first began to make a
name for himself while at the club.
Motorcycle racer, Craig Jones, lived in city
until his death after a high-speed crash at Brands Hatch
; as does Louis
Smith, who in 2008 became Great Britain's first gymnast
to win an individual Olympic medal in a century.
Geography
Climate
According
to the Köppen
classification the British Isles
experience a maritime
climate characterised by relatively cool summers and mild
winters. Compared with other parts of the country, East
Anglia is slightly warmer and sunnier in the summer and colder and
frostier in the winter.
Owing to its inland position, furthest from
the landfall of most Atlantic
depressions, Cambridgeshire is one of the driest
counties in the UK, receiving, on average, less than two feet
(600 mm) of rain per year. The mean annual daily
duration of bright sunshine is four hours and 12 minutes; the
absence of any high ground is probably responsible for the area
being one of the sunniest parts of the British Isles.
Topography
East Anglia is most notable for being almost flat. During the
Ice Age much of the region was covered by
ice sheets and this has influenced the topography and nature of the
soils. Much of Cambridgeshire is low-lying, in some places below
present-day mean sea level.
The lowest point on land is supposedly just
to the south of the city at Holme Fen
, which is nine feet (2.75 m) below sea
level. The largest of the many settlements along the
Fen edge, Peterborough has been called the
Gateway to the Fens.
Before they were drained the Fens
were liable to periodic flooding so arable farming was limited to the higher areas
of the Fen edge, with the rest of the Fenland
dedicated to pastoral
farming. In this way, the medieval and early modern Fens
stood in contrast to the rest of southern England, which was
primarily arable. Since the advent of modern drainage in the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries the Fens have been radically
transformed such that arable farming has almost entirely replaced
pastoral. The city includes the outlying settlement at
RAF Wittering, the
Home of the Harrier, and as a unitary authority
borders Northamptonshire to the west, Lincolnshire to the north,
and non-metropolitan Cambridgeshire to the south and east.
The city
centre is located at 52°35'N latitude
0°15'W longitude or Ordnance
Survey
national grid
reference TL 185 998.
Urban areas of the city
Townships are in bold type. Bretton, Orton Longueville
and Orton Waterville are parished. The city council also
works closely with Werrington neighbourhood association which
operates on a similar basis to a parish council
Bretton
- Dogsthorpe
- Eastfield
- Eastgate
- Fengate
- Fletton
- Gunthorpe
- The Hamptons
- Longthorpe
- Millfield
- Netherton
- Newark
- New England
- The
Ortons - Parnwell
- Paston
- Ravensthorpe
- Stanground
- Walton
- Werrington - West
Town
- Westwood
- Woodston
Surrounding villages in the district
Civil parishes do not cover the
whole of England and mostly exist in rural areas. They are
usually administered by parish councils which have various local
responsibilities
Ailsworth
- Bainton - Barnack
- Borough Fen
- Castor
- Deeping Gate
- Etton
- Eye
- Eye Green
- Glinton
- Helpston
- Marholm
- Maxey
- Newborough
- Northborough
- Peakirk
- Southorpe
- St.
Martin's Without
- Sutton
- Thorney
- Thornhaugh
- Ufford
- Upton
- Wansford
- Wittering
- Wothorpe
These are further arranged into 24 electoral
wards for the purposes of local
government.
15 wards comprise the Peterborough
constituency for elections to the House of
Commons
, while the remaining nine fall within the North
West Cambridgeshire constituency.
Linguistics
Peterborough lies in the middle of several
distinct regional accent groups and as such has a hybrid of Fenland
East Anglian, East Midland and London
Estuary English features. The city
falls just north of the A vowel
isogloss
and as such most native speakers will use the
flat A, as found in
cat, in words such as
last.
Yod-dropping is often heard from Peterborians,
as in the rest of East Anglia, for example
new as .
However, the large number of newcomers has impacted greatly on the
English spoken by the younger
generation. Common so-called Estuary English features such as
L-vocalisation,
T-glottalisation and
Th-fronting give today's Peterborough accent a
definite
south-eastern
sound.
Affiliations
Town twinning started in
Europe after the Second World War. Its purpose was to
promote friendship and greater understanding between the people of
different European cities. A twinning link is a formal, long-term
friendship agreement involving co-operation between two communities
in different countries and endorsed by both local authorities. The
two communities organise projects and activities around a range of
issues and develop an understanding of historical, cultural,
lifestyle similarities and differences. Peterborough is twinned
with the following towns:
Alcalá de Henares
, Spain
Queen Katherine's birthplace (since 1986)
Bourges
, France
(since 1957)
Forlì
, Italy
(since 1981)
Viersen
, Germany
(since 1982)
Vinnytsya, Ukraine
(since 1991)
The city
also has more informal friendship links with Ballarat
, Australia; Foggia
, Italy; Kwe
Kwe
, Zimbabwe
; Pécs
, Hungary
; and all Peterboroughs around the
world. The county of Cambridgeshire has been
twinned with Kreis
Viersen
, Germany since 1983.
References
Footnotes
- Resident Population Estimates by Ethnic Group
(Percentages) Office for National
Statistics, June 2006.
- Parthey, Gustav and Pinder, Moritz (eds.) Itinerarivm
Antonini Avgvsti et Hierosolymitanum: ex libris manu scriptis
Iter Britanniarvm (Iter V: Item a Londinio
Luguvalio ad vallum mpm clvi sic) Friederich Nicolaus,
Berlin, 1848. See also Reynolds, Thomas Iter Britanniarum or
that part of the itinerary of Antoninus which relates to Britain
with a new comment J. Burges, Cambridge, 1799.
- They came, they saw Top 30 Roman sites (6),
Channel 4 Television. Retrieved 20 July 2008.
- National Monuments Record Monument No. 364099,
Historic
Buildings and Monuments Commission for England. Retrieved 20
July 2008.
- Bodleian, MS. Laud 636 (E), see Ingram,
James Henry (trans.) The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle J. M. Dent
& Sons, London, 1823 ( facsimile of
the 1847 Everyman's Library ed. with additional readings from the
translation of John Allen Giles from Project
Gutenberg, retrieved 19 September 2007). . A modern edition,
comparing the Peterborough version with such others as survive, is
in Garmonsway, George Norman (trans.) The Anglo-Saxon
Chronicle J. M. Dent & Sons, London, 1972 & 1975. .
For the Peterborough Chronicle's unique information, see also
Clark, Cecily (ed.) The Peterborough Chronicle 1070–1154
(pp.xxi-xxx) Oxford University Press, 1958. ISBN 0198111363.
- Bennett, Jack Arthur Walter Middle
English Literature (ed. and completed by Douglas Gray), Oxford
University Press, 1986. ISBN 0198122144.
- Originating in a new name for the abbey at Medeshamstede, and
not the town, the name Burh was adopted for the abbey in
the late tenth century, see Garmonsway (p. 117), also Mellows,
William Thomas (ed.) The Chronicle of Hugh Candidus a Monk of
Peterborough (pp.38 & 480) Oxford University Press, 1949,
; the addition of Peter, the name of the abbey's principal
titular saint, parallels development of eg. the name Bury St.
Edmunds and will have served to distinguish between the two
places. Exemplified in medieval records in the Latinised form
Burgus Sancti Petri, this gave rise to the modern name
Peterborough.
- Garmonsway (pp.183 & 198-99); Mellows, 1949 (p.66). As a
modern local historian has put it, this was "a rhetorical term,"
used in these twelfth-century local histories "to contrast the
riches of the late [Anglo-Saxon] monastery with the decrease in
income caused by later impositions and the despoliation of the
monastic treasure by Hereward," see Tebbs, Herbert F.
Peterborough: A History (p.23) The Oleander Press,
Cambridge, 1979. ISBN 0900891300 .
- Chisholm,
Hugh (ed.) Encyclopædia Britannica
vol.21
Cambridge University Press, 1911 (text in the public domain).
- Davies, Elizabeth et al. Peterborough: A Story of City and Country, People and
Places (pp.18-19) Peterborough City Council and Pitkin
Unichrome, 2001.
- King, Richard J. Handbook to the Cathedrals of England
(p.77) John Murray, London, 1862.
- Under the Municipal Corporations Act
1835 (5 & 6 Wm. IV c.76), Charter of Incorporation dated 17
March 1874.
- "At the bridge of Peterborough by the River Nene, as well in
the county of Huntingdon as in the county of Northampton, on all
sides of the bridge".
- Tebbs (p.125).
- Brooks, John A Flavour of the Welland (p.12) The Welland
Partnership and Jarrold Publishing, Norwich, 2004.
- Davies (pp.23-24).
- London Brick: 130 Years of History 1877–2007
Hanson Building Products, 2007.
- Baker, Anne Pimlott. "Perkins, Francis Arthur (1889–1967)".
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University
Press, 2004. .
- Davies (pp.26-27).
- The History of British Sugar, British Sugar
(retrieved 5 January 2008).
- Under the New Towns Act 1965 (1965 cap.59) cf. The Peterborough Development Corporation (Transfer of
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The Herbert Press, London, 1992 (ISBN 1-87156-947-8)
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Candidus a Monk of Peterborough, Oxford University Press, 1949
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Friederich Nicolaus, Berlin, 1848
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Landscape Tempus Publishing, Stroud, 2005 (ISBN
0-7524-2900-0)
- Rhodes, John The Nene Valley Railway Turntable
Publications, Sheffield, 1976 (ISBN 0-90284-460-1)
- Salter, Mike The Castles of East Anglia Folly
Publications, Malvern, 2001 (ISBN 1-87173-145-3)
- Skinner, Julia (with particular reference to the work of Robert
Cook) Did You Know? Peterborough: A Miscellany
The Francis Frith Collection, Salisbury, 2006 (ISBN
1-84589-263-1)
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Peterborough: A Description of its Fabric and a Brief History of
the Episcopal See G. Bell & Sons, London, 1898 (1926
reprint of the 2nd ed. of Bell's Cathedrals)
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Press, Cambridge, 1979 (ISBN 0-900891-30-0)
- Turner, Roger Capability Brown and the Eighteenth Century
English Landscape Phillimore & Co., Chichester, 1999 (ISBN
1-86077-114-9)
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of England (2 vols.) The Offices of the Royal Historical
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See also
External links