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The Beginnings of Worcester

  • 16 Feb 2019
  • Historical Studies
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Worcester was the first ford, coming up the Severn, at the head of the tideway which was not unduly affected by the tide, but equally important, there was sharpe rising ground which provided a place of comparative safety for those using the ford. This rising ground which Willis Bund called 'the Tump', is that on which the King's School, Cathedral and the Old Palace now stand. To give some further protection, a bank was built around the tump and this developed into an enclosure surrounded by an earth rampart.

This site is one of the oldest occupied in the country, for it was fortified by the British, the oldest inhabitants of the land of whom history speaks., When the Romans came, they too, occupied the site, for many Roman remains were found when Castle Hill, at the southern end of the tump was removed in 1830, and from the vast amount of iron slag and cinders around the area of the old demolished cattle market, it must have been a very important iron producing area. 

Nothing is known of Worcester's history from the withdrawal of the Romans until A.D 655, when missionary priests settled on the tump, undoubtedly to provide shelter to travellers at that important crossing of the Severn. his Christian settlement must soon have become important, for in 680 a monk from St.Hilda's Abbey of Whitby named Bosel was sent to become the first Bishop of Worcester, and a priory  was founded, the church of which was the precursor of the present Cathedral.

For the next three-and-half centuries the inhabitants of Worcester was harried y invaders, mostly the Danes, coming up the Severn, and they appealed to Werferth, their Bishop, to try and obtain additional protection for them. Warfeth approached Ethelred, Earl of the Mercians, and Aethelfaed his wife, who with the consent of King Alfred and the Mercian Witan, had the town walled in about  889-899.