An Environmental History of Wildlife in England 1650-1950

(Elle) #1

lisT of figures


Figure 1 The principal landscape regions of England 5


Figure 2 Early-modern farming regions 8


Figure 3 The medieval deer park at Hursley, Hampshire, as shown on


an early sixteenth-century map 14

Figure 4 A wood-pasture common in Gressenhall, Norfolk 21


Figure 5 Wayland Wood, Norfolk 22


Figure 6 Typical heathland near Sutton, Suffolk 25


Figure 7 A water meadow at Charlton-all-Saints, Wiltshire,


in the 1930s 39

Figure 8 Reconstructions of the layout of open fields in


Northamptonshire before enclosure 43

Figure 9 Typical Midland landscape in the early eighteenth century 45


Figure 10 A typical laid hedge 47


Figure 11 A coppiced hedge 48


Figure 12 Beeston-next-Mileham, Norfolk, in 1761 51


Figure 13 Sopwell House, St Albans, Hertfordshire, on an undated


seventeenth-century map 64

Figure 14 A ‘pillow mound’ on a former Dartmoor rabbit warren 67


Figure 15 Graph showing the growth of the population of England


between 1550 and 1950 74

Figure 16 William Williams’ ‘Afternoon View of Coalbrookdale’


(Shropshire), 1777 80

Figure 17 The growth of the canal and rail networks in eighteenth- and


nineteenth-century England 84

Figure 18 Farming regions and land use in mid-nineteenth-century


England 94

Figure 19 The distribution of parliamentary enclosure in England 96


Figure 20 Typical nineteenth-century hawthorn hedge 105


Figure 21 Modernizing the landscape of Weston Colville in 1825 107


Figure 22 Ridge and furrow in Northamptonshire 111

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