Books

Category : Article



For the images in the gallery sets below, if you click on the image you will get a close-up of the image which is usually the cover page of the book. If you click on the title under the image you will go to the text of the work, which in most cases can be down-loaded as a free e-book in various formats:

Modern Books
These links only give partial views of the contents in most cases (or none at all), but these are some of the more useful resources on Chester. If you are in Chester then most can usually be obtained from the book/giftshop at the Grosvenor Museum - together with several others.

Journals and Catalogs

 * List of Journals of the Chester Archaeological Society at Internet Archive;
 * The Archaeological Journal Vol. 94 p. 303-4 (1937);
 * List of Remains, Historical and Literary, Connected with the Palatine Counties of Lancaster and Chester at Internet Archive;

Travel Books describing visits to Chester
Edward Parry wrote a number of "Railway Companions" - here is a list at Internet Archive. Most of the other books in this section are trips which pass through Chester but have some comments on the City as it was at the time.

River Dee
The River Dee (Welsh: Afon Dyfrdwy) flows 110 miles from it's source to Hilbre Island. Travelling through Wales and England and also forming part of the international border between them, the river rises in Snowdonia, flows north via Chester and discharges into an estuary between Wales and The Wirral. The lower reaches of the river are unusual in that comparatively little water occupies so large a basin. One theory of a contributory factor to the large basin is that once the River Mersey and/or the River Severn flowed into the Dee. A more recent theory, however, is that the estuary was not formed by water, but by ice being pushed southwards by the pressure of an icecap over the Irish Sea. The total catchment area of the River Dee up to Chester Weir is 1,816.8 square kilometres (701.5 sq mi). The average rainfall over the catchment is estimated to be 640 millimetres (25 in) yielding an average flow of 37 m³/s. Further detail on the River Dee can be found on these pages:

Upper Reaches
From the source of the river at springs on the slopes of "Black Hill" Dduallt above Llanuwchllyn in the mountains of Snowdonia, through Wales, to its emergence from the Vale of Llangollen; here the young river flows swiftly and the majority of erosion takes place, cutting relatively narrow, steep-sided, "V"-shaped valleys, often with interlocking spurs.

Middle Reaches
Through England and the Welsh borders to Chester; the "middle aged" river slows down and the valley becomes broader. Both erosion and deposition of material takes place, leading to the formation of meanders and occasional changes of course which have in cases left pockets of England "stranded" on the Welsh side of the River Dee.

Lower Reaches
Back in Wales, below Chester to Hilbre Islands and the sea; the river is now in "old-age" and while there is little erosion a lot of material is deposited. In the case of the River Dee this deposition has had a significant impact on the economic development of Chester, effectively turning a major port into a relatively quiet backwater. The estuary is important for birdlife and has been designated both as a "Site of Special Scientific Interest" and under the "Ramsar Convention" on "Wetlands of International Importance", especially as waterfowl habitats.

Chronicles and More General Histories
There are other bibliography pages at:


 * Vortigern Studies;
 * Early British Kingdoms;
 * Contemporary sources for the Bayeux Tapestry
 * Online Medieval Sources Bibliography
 * The New Northvegr Center;

Chronicles

 * The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle;
 * Six old English chronicles: Ethelwerd's Chronicle, Asser's Life of Alfred, Geoffrey of Monmouth's British history, Gildas, Nennius and Richard of Cirencester.

N.B. Richard of Cirencester's De Situ Britanniae was faked by Charles Bertram prior to publication in 1747 although it was revealed to be a fake in 1845, it had by then provided misinformation which turned up in many other works. The first use of the name Pennines to describe the English mountain range is from De Situ Britanniae. Quoting:


 * This province is divided into two equal parts by a chain of mountains called the Pennine Alps, which rising on the confines of the Iceni and Carnabii, near the river Trivona [ Trent ], extend towards the north in a continued series of fifty miles.

In 1853, Arthur Hussey listed several names in De Situ Britanniae that he could not trace to another source, and the "Pennine" Alps was one of them. So the Romans never called the Pennines that and the name was made up by a forger in 1747!

Chronicles of the reigns of Stephen, Henry II., and Richard I:
 * Volume 1: William, of Newburgh, 1136-1201?: Historia rerum anglicarum;
 * Volume 2: Richard of Newburgh (cont); Etienne, de Rouen, moine au Bec, d. 1149: Draco normannicus;
 * Volume 3: Richard, of Hexham, fl. 1141: Historia de gestis Regis Stephani et de Bello Standardii; Aelred, of Rievaulx, Saint, 1110-1167: De bello Standardii; Fantosme, Jordan, fl. 1158-1174: Chronique; Richard, of Devizes, ca. 1150-ca. 1200: Chronicon de rebus gestis Ricardi primi;
 * Volume 4: Robert, de Torigni, d. 1186. Chronique;

From William Camden
But to testifie the Romanes magnificence, there are remaining indeede at this day very few tokens, besides pavements of foure square checker worke: howbeit in the former ages it presented many, which Ranulph a Monke of this Citie shall tell you out of his Polychronicon in these his owne words: There be waies heere under the ground vaulted marvelously with stone worke, chambers having arched roofes over had, huge stones engraven with the names of ancient men. Heere also are sometimes digged up peeces of money coined by Julius Caesar and other famous persons, and stamped with their inscriptions.

Likewise Roger of Chester in his Policraticon, When I behold (saith he) the groundworke of buildings in the streets laid with monstrous big stones, it seemeth that it hath beene founded by the painfull labour of Romans or giants, rather than by the sweat of Britans.

This Citie, built in forme of a quadrant foure square, is enclosed with a wall that taketh up more than two miles in compasse, and hath eleven parishes. But that of Saint Johns without the Northgate was the fairest, being a stately and solemne building, as appeareth by the remaines, wherein were anciently Prebendaries and, as some write, the Bishops See.

Neere unto the river standeth the Castle upon a rockie hill, built by the Earles, where the Courts Palatine and the Assises, as they call them, are kept twice a yeere.

The houses are very faire built, and along the chiefe streets are galleries or walking places, they call them rowes, having shops on both sides, through which a man may walke dry from one end to the other.

But it hath not continued evermore in one tenor of prosperity. First it was rased by Egfrid King of Northumberland, then by the Danes, yet reedified againe by Aedelfled Lady of the Mercians, and soone after it saw King Eadgar in magnificent maner triumphing over the British Princes. For sitting himselfe in a barge at the fore-decke, Kennadie King of the Scots, Malcoline King of Cumberland, Macon King of Mann and of the Ilands, with all the Princes of Wales brought to do homage, and like watermen working at the Ore, rowed him along the river Dee in a triumphant shew, to his great glory and joy of the beholders.

Certaine yeeres after, and namely about the yeere of our redemption 1094, whenas in a devout and religious emulation, as one saith, Princes strove avie that Cathedrall Churches and Minsters should bee erected in a more decent and seemelie forme, and whenas Christendome rouzed as it were her selfe, and, casting away her old habilimentes, did put on everiewhere the bright and white robe of the Churches, Hugh the first of the Norman bloud that was Earle of Chester repaired the Church, which Earle Leofrick had formerlie founded in honour of the Virgin Saint Werburga, and by the advise of Anselm, whom hee had procured to come out of Normandie, granted the same unto monkes. And now it is notorious for the tombe of Henrie the Fourth, Emperour of Almaine [Germany], who, as they say, gave over his empire and lived heere an Eremites life, and for the Bishops See therein established. Which See immediately after the Normans conquest Peter Bishop of Lichfield translated from Lichfield hither, but when it was brought to Coventrie, and from thence into the ancient seat againe, West-chester lay a long time bereft of this Episcopall dignity, untill in our fathers daies King Henrie the Eighth, having thrust out the monkes, ordeined Prebendaries and restored a Bishop againe, under whom for his Dioecise hee appointed this Country, Lancashire, Richmond &c., and appointed the same to bee within the Province of the Archbishop of Yorke.

But returne wee now to matters of greater antiquity. Whenas now the said Cathedrall church was built, the Earles that were of the Normans line fortified the citie both with walles and castle. For as the Bishop held of the King that which belongeth to his Bishopricke (these are the words of Domesday-booke made by King William the Conquerour), so the Earles with their men held of the King wholy all the rest of the City. It paide geld or tribute for fifty hides, and foure hundred thirty and one houses were thus geldable, and seaven Mint-maisters. When the King himselfe in person came thither every Carrucata yeelded unto him two hundred Hesthas, and one tun full of Ale, and one Rusca of butyr. And in the same place, for the reedification of the City wall and the bridge, the Provost gave warning by an edict that out of every Hide in the County one man should come, and looke whose man came not, his Lord or Maister was fined in fortie shillings to the King and the Earle. If I should particulate the scufflings and skirmishes hereabout betweene the Welsh and English in the beginning of the Normans time, their inrodes and outrodes, the often scarfyres [fires] in the Suburbs of Hanbrid beyond the bridge, whereupon the Welshmen call it Treboeth, that is, The burnt towne, as also the wall made there of Welshmens sculls that went a great length, I should seeme to forget my selfe and thrust my sicle into the Historians harvest.

But ever since the said time hath Chester notablie flourished, and King Henry the Seventh made it a County by it selfe incorporate. Neither wanteth any thing there that may be required in a most flourishing City, but that the Ocean, being offended and angrie (as it were) at certaine Mills in the very chanell of the river Dee, hath by little withdrawne himselfe backe, and affordeth not unto the citie the commoditie of an haven, as heretofore. The Longitude of this place is twentie degrees and three and twentie scruples, the Latitude three and fiftie degrees and eleven scruples. If you desire to know more touching this citie, have here these reports out of Lucian that monke above said, who lived almost five hundred yeeres agoe. First, it is to be considered that Chester is built as a Citie, the site whereof inviteth and allureth the eye, which beeing situate in the West parts of Britaine, was in times past a place of receipt to the Legions comming afarre off to repose themselves, and served sufficientlie to keepe the keies, as I may say, of Ireland, for the Romans to preserve the limite of their Empire. For beeing opposite to the North-east part of Ireland, it openeth waie for passage of ships, and mariners with spred saile passing not often but continuallie to and fro, as also for the commodities of sundrie sorts of merchandise. And whiles it casteth an eye forward into the East, it looketh toward not onely the See of Rome and the Empire thereof, but the whole world also, so that it standeth forth as a kenning place to the view of eyes, that there may bee knowne valiant exploites, and the long traine and consequence of things; as also whatsoever throughout the world hath beene done by all persons, in all places, and at all times, and what ever hath beene yll done may also bee avoided and taken heed of. Which Citie having foure gates from the foure cardinall winds, on the East side hath a prospect toward India, on the West toward Ireland, North-Eastward the greater Norway, and Southward that streit and narrow Angle which divine severity, by reason of civill and home-discords, hath left unto the Britans. Which long since by their bitter variance have caused the name of Britaine to be changed into the name of England. Over and beside, Chester hath by Gods gift a river to enrich and adorne it; the same, faire and fishfull, hard by the Citie walls. And on the Southside a rode and harbour for shippes coming from Gascoine, Spaine, and Germanie, which with the helpe and direction of Christ, by the labour and wisdome of merchantes, repaire and refresh the heart of the City with many good things, that wee, being comforted every waie by our Gods grace, may also drinke wine often, more frankelie and plentuouslie because those Countries enjoy the frute of the Vineyards aboundantlie. Moreover the open sea ceaseth not to visite it every daie with a tide, which according as the broad shelves and barres of sands are opened or hidden by tides and ebbes incessantlie, is wont more or less either to send or exchange one thing or other, and by his reciprocall flow and returnes, either to bring in or to carrie out somewhat.

=General Reference=


 * British History Online - exhaustive history;
 * GENUKI - list of "INFORMATION RELATING TO CHESHIRE" useful for genealogy;

=More or less directly relating to Chester (Online)=

The following guides and other books connected to Chester are available online:


 * A Sketch of the Materials for a New and Compleat History of Cheshire Foote Gower, Thomas Falconer (1773);


 * The History of Cheshire Daniel King (1778);


 * The Chester Guide: Or, an Account of the Antient and Present State of that City Broster(1781);


 * The antiquities of England and Wales (1784) mentions the Water Tower, Chester Castle and Beeston Castle;


 * Chester in the Civel War (1800);


 * Handy guide-book to Chester and its vicinity; with brief notices of its civil and ecclesiastical history; Roman and Saxon antiquites, walls, castle, and cathedral; and a description of Eaton Hall (18--?)


 * Topographical and statistical description of the county of Chester George Cooke (1806);


 * General View of the Agriculture of Cheshire; with Observations Drawn Up for the Consideration of the Board of Agriculture, and Internal Improvement Henry Holland (1808)


 * The Chester Guide Broster (1810);


 * History of the City of Chester: From Its Foundation to the Present Time, Collected from Public Records, Private Manuscripts, and Other Authentic Sources : with an Account of Parochial and Other Charities, Never Before Published, and a Chronological Register of Important Events to the Year 1815 John M.B. Pigot (1815)


 * The history of the county palatine and city of Chester Vol I George Omerod (1819);


 * The history of the county palatine and city of Chester Vol II George Omerod (1819);


 * The history of the county palatine and city of Chester Vol III George Omerod (1819);


 * A Walk round the Walls and City of Chester. John Broster (1821);


 * The history of the county palatine of Chester J H. Hanshall (1823);


 * The Stranger's Companion in Chester; being a familiar guide to its public buildings, institutions, and other places remarkable either for their curiosity or antiquity. George Batenham (1827);


 * The Chester Guide; Or, a Walk Round the Walls, and Through the City John Seacome, (1828);


 * England & Wales delineated,( Curiosities of Great Britain) T. Dugdale, assisted by W. Burnett, (1830);


 * History of the City of Chester Joseph Hemingway (1831);


 * Panorama of the City of Chester" Joseph Hemingway (1836);


 * The diary Of Bishop of Chester Thomas Cartwright (published 1843)


 * The Chester Plays: a Collection of Mysteries Volumes 1-2 Thomas Wright (1843);


 * The medieval architecture of Chester by John Henry Parker (1858);


 * The stranger's handbook to Chester and its environs by Thomas Hughes (1858);


 * Chester as it was Howson Rimmer (1872);


 * Annales Cestrienses; or, Chronicle of the Abbey of S. Werburg, at Chester. (1879);


 * The Cheshire Sheaf: Being Local Gleanings, Historical and Antiquarian, Relating to Cheshire (1880);


 * A glossary of words used in the county of Chester Robert Holland (1886);


 * Sermons in Timber and Stone: Historic Legends of the City of Chester George Longrigg (1892);


 * Chester in the Plantagenet and Tudor Reigns Rupert Morris( 1893);


 * Chester Rupert Morris (1895);


 * A List of the Clergy in Eleven Deaneries of the Diocese of Chester. 1541-42 (1896);


 * Chester Cathedral John Lionel Darby (1898);


 * St Mary on the hill (1898);


 * Chester: a Historical and Topographical Account of the City Bertram Coghill Alan Windle (1903);


 * The cathedral church of Chester - a description of the fabric and a brief history of the episcopal see Charles Hiatt (1905);


 * The Rolls of the Freemen of the City of Chester (Part 1). John Henry Elliot Bennett (1908);


 * The Rolls of the Freemen of the City of Chester (Part 2). John Henry Elliot Bennett (1908);


 * The Financial Administration of the Lordship and County of Chester, 1272-1377 Paul Howson William Booth (1981);


 * War and Society in Medieval Cheshire, 1277-1403 Philip Morgan (1987)


 * The Administration of the County Palatine of Chester, 1442-1485 Dorothy J. Clayton (1990);


 * The Origins of Cheshire N. J. Higham (1993);


 * Progress and Problems in Medieval England: Essays in Honour of Edward Miller (2002)

=Travel Books mentioning Chester=


 * The Journey from Chester to London Thomas Pennant (1782);


 * An excursion from Sidmouth to Chester, in the summer of 1803 Edmund Butcher (1805) - see pages 188ff for a description of Chester in 1805.


 * Parry's Railway Companion (1848]


 * Motor Routes of England;


 * England, Picturesque and Descriptive, by Joel Cook (1882)

=Others=


 * The adventures of a salmon in the river Dee by William Ayrton


 * Vita sancti Germani Constantine of Lyon;


 * Notitia Cestriensis: Or Historical Notices of the Diocese of Chester by Francis Gastrell (1845)


 * Dictionary of England Samuel Lewis (1848) ;


 * A History of England Under the Norman Kings By Johann Martin Lappenberg (1857)


 * The History of the Anglo-Saxon by Sharon Turner (1852)


 * History of England Vol 1 (the Anglo Saxon Period) Francis Palgrave (1831)


 * The history of Normandy and of England Vol 1 Francis Palgrave (1851)


 * The history of Normandy and of England Vol 2 Francis Palgrave (1851)


 * The history of Normandy and of England Vol 3 Francis Palgrave (1857)


 * The history of Normandy and of England Vol 4 Francis Palgrave (1851)


 * Marie Trevelyan Folk-lore and Folk-stories of Wales;


 * The Topographer and Genealogist by John Gough Nichols (1846)


 * Domesday Book Cheshire;


 * History of the conquest of England by the Normans by Jacques Nicolas and Augustin Thierry (1847);


 * The History of the Rebellion and Civil Wars in England by Edward Hyde Clarendon


 * Town Geology by Charles Kingsley (as well as writing "The Water Babies", he also was a founder of the Grosvenor Museum)


 * John Haygarth, FRS (1740-1827): A Physician of the Enlightenment by Christopher Charles Booth -Haygarth was physician to Chester infirmary from 1767 to 1798.


 * Observations on the Bill of Mortality, in Chester, for the Year 1772. By Doctor Haygarth


 * Merionethshire by A. Morris (1913);


 * George Bolam Wildlife in Wales;


 * Anna Seward Llangollen vale, with other poems: (1796);


 * A Memoir of Hawarden parish, Flintshire by Richard Willett;


 * George Clarke "Hawarden Castle";