History of Lincolnshire

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Author_Stewart Bennett
barton on humber
boston
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cleethorpes
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fens
forthcoming
gainsborough
gift
grantham
grimsby
International Bomber Command Centre
isaac newton
king john
lincoln guide
lincoln history
lincolnshire history
louth
scunthorpe
skegness
sleaford
spalding
stamford
tennyson
the humber
welsey

Product details

  • ISBN 9781837053964
  • Dimensions: 172 x 244mm
  • Publication Date: 19 Nov 2026
  • Publisher: The History Press Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The historic county of Lincolnshire, stretching from the Humber in the north to the Wash, was for more than a millennium the second largest in England. The Roman occupation through four centuries brought civilisation, and towns such as Lincoln, Caistor and Horncastle were developed and fortified. The Saxons established settlements and cleared forests for farming, to be replaced by violent Viking invaders who in turn were succeeded by the Normans. These new masters built strategic castles at Lincoln and Stamford to become centres of regional power and administration.

Lincolnshire’s coastal situation encouraged commerce with Europe, and in the Middle Ages Boston was the preeminent port in the country, primarily for the wool trade. Throughout the booms and recessions which have characterised agriculture, the county has remained over the centuries one of the foremost areas in England for arable farming. Also covered are the Grimsby fishing industry, the coming of the railways and steelmaking at Scunthorpe, and the county at war is contrasted with the leisure activities at Skegness and Mablethorpe.

This is the essential reference book for the local historian, and a most attractive book on Lincolnshire’s history for the general reader, resident or visitor.

Stewart Bennett has lived in Lincolnshire for 30 years. He has taught history at various high schools and been the education officer at the Lincolnshire Archives Office and the City of Lincoln Archaeology Unit. His particular interest is in the history of rural Lincolnshire in the 19th century but his general enthusiasm for the county’s history was stimulated by the invitation to act as joint editor of An Historical Atlas of Lincolnshire. He is now retired from full time teaching and has spent his time organising educational visits for both adults and children, teaching adult education groups and lecturing at the Open University.

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