New book - A Wiltshire Year
In a previous post I
wrote about my adopted county of Wiltshire, and decided that maybe I
should go and work for the tourist board. But of course there are no
jobs there - paid, at least - so I abandoned writing about motorcycles
and set too on a new book about Wiltshire. And here it is..
England was born in Wiltshire when King Alfred won the
battle of Ethandune in 878, and one of Wiltshire’s famous white horses still
guards the site. Of course people lived in Wiltshire long before that:
Stonehenge was once the most populous place in Europe, and the site of a great
midwinter feast. One of the few places not covered by dense forests, this was where
sheep farming could make England rich and create the biggest empire the world
has seen.
But Britain’s rise came with mixed fortunes. The Black Death
killed millions, yet allowed a new middle class to emerge and create the first
true European democracy. Yet conflict has never been far away, a bloody Civil
War being fought across Wiltshire, and we prepared for two world wars including
the first military airfields. Concorde first flew here and Wiltshire continues to
have the most advanced aircraft in the world regularly visiting her skies.
The canals of Wiltshire brought remarkable feats of
engineering that Brunel would build on to create his Great Western Railway. Suddenly
fresh food could be speedily brought into cities to feed the exploding population,
although not without cost.
By exploring English history through a Wiltshire year each development
can be set in context. How dark winters create superstitions and opportunities,
and how conflicting demands pressurise farmers and wildlife. Stories that tell
how the haves kept the have-nots to heel, but occasionally compromising by
offering rights such as land ownership and
the vote. Yet most of all this is a love letter to the English countryside and
Wiltshire in particular. In a world riddled with divisions this is a chance to
understand our shared heritage, hopefully with plenty of “I didn’t know that”s
along the way.
Greg Pullen has lived in Wiltshire for fifty years, working
as a chartered surveyor specialising in old buildings. His writing has been
published in national newspapers and magazines, and three books for the Crowood
Press. A Wiltshire Year is his second self published book. You can buy it herehttp://teambenzina.bigcartel.com/product/a-wiltshire-year-the-history-of-england-in-one-county-with-free-uk-postage
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