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Broadwindsor
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Broadwindsor

Broadwindsor ( /ˌbrɔːdˈwɪnzər/) is a village and civil parish in the county of Dorset in South West England. It lies two miles (three kilometres) west of Beaminster. Broadwindsor was formerly a liberty, containing only the parish itself. Dorset County Council estimate that in 2013 the population of the civil parish was 1,320.[1] In the 2011 census the population of the parish, combined with that of the small parish of Seaborough to the north, was 1,378.[2]

Key Information

The parish church is principally Perpendicular in style, though it has origins in the 12th and 13th centuries,[3] and was rebuilt in 1868.[4] Thomas Fuller, who wrote The Worthies of England and The History of the Holy Warre, preached here between 1634 and 1650.[5]

King Charles II stayed the night in the village on 23 September 1651, after his flight from the Battle of Worcester.[3][5]

The settlement has a long history, with Paleolithic hand axes found to the west on Hursey Comman, a Bronze Age gold strip found just to the north of the village, a Roman fort, Waddon Hill, between Broadwindsor and Stoke Abbott, and a Roman hypocaust from the mid second century found between Broadwindsor and Little Windsor in about 1910.

The parish includes the village of Drimpton.

Images

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A sunny shot of Broadwindsor in Dorset from the slopes of the nearby Lewesdon Hill, the highest point in Dorset
Broadwindsor from the slopes of Lewesdon Hill
The image shows The White Lion pub in Broadwindsor at sunset. The front entrance is shown with the green sign in the centre of the image
The White Lion pub, a main social centre in Broadwindsor
The image shows St John the Baptist church, Broadwindsor, from an aerial perspective taken using a drone. The church tower features prominently in the middle of the image, with views of the countryside and village of Broadwindsor in the background
Aerial shot of St John the Baptist

See also

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References

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