Although
Shaftesbury (population 1990: 6,180) historically dates from
Anglo-Saxon times, it may have been the
Celtic Caer Palladur. Its first recorded appearance as a town is in the
Burgal Hideage[?] . The borough was created by
Alfred the Great in
880 as a defence in the struggle with the Danish invaders.. The foundation of the
Shaftesbury Abbey[?] in
888 was a spur to the growing importance of the town and
Athelstan founded three mints. King Canute died here in
1035. In the
Domesday Book the town was known as
Scaepterbyrg its ownership being equally shared between King and Abbey. The Abbey was in the
middle ages the central focus of the town. The shrine of
St Edward[?] attracted
pilgrims from afar. In
1260 a charter to hold a
market was granted. In
1392 Richard II confirmed a grant of two markets on different days. Shaftesbury was a parliamentary
constituency[?] returning two members from
1296 to the
Reform Act of 1832, when it was reduced to one, and in
1884 the separate constituency was abolished. The town was broadly parliamentarian in the
Civil War, but was in
royalist hands. Wardour Castle fell to Parliamentary forces in
1643; Parliamentary forces surrounded the town in August
1645 and it was a centre of
Clubmen[?] activity. Shaftesbury took no part in the
Monmouth Rebellion of
1685. The major employers in the 18th and 19th centuries were buttonmaking and weaving. The former became a victim of mechanisation, and this caused unemployment and emigration. The number of turnpikes which met at Shaftesbury ensured that the town had a good coaching trade. The railways, however, bypassed Shaftesbury, and this infuenced the sunsequent pattern of its growth. It is the
Shaston of
Thomas Hardy's
Jude the Obscure.
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