Bakewell
Bakewell is a little market town and civil parish in the Derbyshire Dales district of Derbyshire, England, understood for a regional confection, Bakewell pudding. It pushes the River Wye, concerning 13 miles (21 kilometres) south-west of Sheffield. In the 2011 census the civil parish of Bakewell had a population of 3,949. The community is close to the visitor destinations of Chatsworth House and also Haddon Hall. Although there is evidence of earlier negotiations in the area, Bakewell itself was possibly established in Anglo Saxon times, when Bakewell remained in the Anglian kingdom of Mercia. The name Bakewell indicates a springtime or stream of a guy called Badeca (or Beadeca) and also originates from this personal name plus the Old English wella. In 949 it was Badecanwelle and also in the 11th century Domesday Book it was Badequelle. Bakewell Church Church, a Grade I provided structure, was founded in 920 and has a 9th-century cross in the churchyard. Today church was built in the 12th-- 13th centuries however was virtually rebuilt in the 1840s by William Flockton. By Norman times Bakewell had obtained some significance: the town and also its church (having two clergymans) are mentioned in the Domesday Book and a motte and bailey castle was constructed in the 12th century. In the early 14th-century, the vicar was terrorised by the Coterel gang, who evicted him and took the church's cash at the instigation of the canons of Lichfield Cathedral. A market was developed in 1254 and also Bakewell created as a trading centre. The Grade I-listed five-arched bridge over the River Wye was constructed in the 13th century as well as is just one of minority surviving residues of that period. An additional Grade I-listed bridge, Holme Bridge, was built in 1664 and crosses the Wye on the north-eastern borders of the community. A chalybeate spring was found and a bath home built in 1697. This caused an 18th-century proposal to establish Bakewell as a health facility town in the manner of Buxton. Building And Construction of Lumford Mill by Richard Arkwright in 1777 was complied with by the restoring of much of the community in the 19th century.