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Banbury

From The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia with Atlas and Weather Guide
Market town in Oxfordshire, central England, on the River Cherwell, 40 km/25 mi north of Oxford, and administrative centre for Cherwell District Council; population (2001) 41,800. Industries include food processing (Kraft Jacobs Suchard), traditional brewing (Hook Norton, Merivales), printing, and the manufacture of car components, electrical goods, and aluminium. The Banbury Cross of the nursery rhyme ‘Ride a Cock Horse to Banbury Cross’ was destroyed by the Puritans in 1602, but replaced in 1859. There was a castle in Banbury from 1125, although the structure was destroyed during the English Civil War. In 1469, during the Wars of the Roses, the Yorkists suffered a defeat nearby at the Battle of Banbury. In the English Civil War, Banbury surrendered to Charles I in 1642, and was besieged by the Parliamentarians, led by John Fiennes, in 1643, 1644, and in 1646, when the garrison finally surrendered. The town had been an important wool-trading centre, especially in the 13th century, …
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Full text Article Banbury

From Brewer's Britain and Ireland
‘Ban(n)a's stronghold’, OE male personal name Ban ( n ) a + BURY . A market town in Oxfordshire, about 40 km (25 miles) north of Oxford. Nowadays it is most closely associated with its cakes and the nursery rhyme about its cross ( see below ), but in former, more religiously intense centuries it had…
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Full text Article Banbury

From Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable
A town in Oxfordshire, proverbially known for its puritans , its ‘cheese-paring’, its cakes and its cross. Hence a ‘Banbury man’ is a Puritan or bigot. Zeal-of-the-land Busy in Ben Jonson's Bartholomew Fair (1614) is described as a Banbury man. In my progress travelling Northward, Taking my farewell…
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Full text Article Banbury

From The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia with Atlas and Weather Guide
Market town in Oxfordshire, central England, on the River Cherwell, 40 km/25 mi north of Oxford, and administrative centre for Cherwell District Council; population (2001) 41,800. Industries include food processing (Kraft Jacobs Suchard), traditional brewing (Hook Norton, Merivales), printing, and…
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Full text Article Banbury cakes

From The Oxford Companion to Food
are named after the town in Oxfordshire with which they have been associated since at least the 17th century. The cakes were sold from a shop there in 1638, by one Betty White according to some local records. (This shop, in Parsons Street, was certainly known as ‘The Original Banbury Cake Shop’ in…
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I warn and I protect
CHARLES WILLIAM BANBURY , 3rd Baron and 3rd Baronet; b 29 July 1953; s 1981; ed Eton: m 1st, 1984 ( m diss 1986), Lucinda Elizabeth Scarlett, elder da of John Frederick Edward Trehearne ( see B Harvington ); 2ndly, 1989, Mrs Inger Marianne Norton, da of Tor Wiegert, and has issue by 2nd m . Arms — …
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Full text Article Banbury

From The Oxford Companion to Children's Literature
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Full text Article Banbury

From The Columbia Encyclopedia
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Full text Article Banbury

From Merriam-Webster's Geographical Dictionary
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Light after darkness
Sir BERNARD MICHAEL FRANCIS SAMUELSON , 5th Baronet ; b 17 Jan 1917; s his father, Capt Sir FRANCIS HENRY BERNHARD , 1981; ed Eton; late Lt RA; Burma 1939–45 War (despatches): m 1952, Janet Amy, yr da of Lt-Cdr Lawrence Garrett Elkington, of Chelsea, SW3, and has issue. Arms — Sable, three piles…
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s of Ralph Cecil Banbury (d 1951), of London, and Florence Leslie St Clair Keith b. 23 May 1948 Gordonstoun 1, 17 Nov 1973, Rosemary Henrietta Dorothy, da of Capt Anthony Henry Heber Villiers, of Woodchester, Glos; m 2, 28 Sept 1978, Susan Margaret, da of Lt-Col Joseph Patrick Feeny (d 1970), of…
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