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  1. Cranborne Chase. Coordinates: 50.961°N 2.044°W. Ashmore pond. Cranborne Chase (grid reference ST970180) is an area of central southern England, straddling the counties Dorset, Hampshire and Wiltshire. It is part of the Cranborne Chase and West Wiltshire Downs Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB). The area is dominated by, and often ...

  2. History in the Landscape. Eight thousand years ago, Neolithic peoples first started to change and manage the land. They built the first burial mounds and mysterious constructions such as the Dorset Cursus. During the Bronze and Iron ages the area became settled and large areas of pasture and arable farmland were created.

  3. Jun 7, 2021 · Timeline. Ancient, Early Modern, Medieval, World War One. Place. England, United Kingdom. Building Category. Historic Landscape. Stretched over Dorset, Hampshire and Wiltshire, Cranborne Chase is a chalk plateau part of the English Chalk Formation. The steep slope faces the...

  4. On Cranborne Chase they built burial mounds and mysterious earth constructions such as the Dorset Curcus. During the Bronze and Iron ages, people created large areas of arable farmlands and pasture for domestic animals.

    • When was Cranborne Chase built?1
    • When was Cranborne Chase built?2
    • When was Cranborne Chase built?3
    • When was Cranborne Chase built?4
    • When was Cranborne Chase built?5
  5. Roman History of Cranborne Chase. During the Roman occupation, Cranborne Chase was a rural area. Archaeological evidence suggests that the area were no Roman urban centres on this landscape, but instead the area was dotted with several Roman villas which were farming estates, as well as smaller rural sites.

  6. The early history of Cranborne Chase is uncertain. It seems probable that the owner in Edward the Confessor’s reign was a nobleman called Brictric, grandson of the lord Haylward de Meau, who founded a monastery at Cranborne, and that after the Conquest it became a royal preserve.

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  8. 6 days ago · Cranborne Manor House, historically one of the most important domestic buildings in England, incorporates the main walls of a fortified hunting lodge built by King John in 12078 (History of the King's Works, II, 922). It was acquired in 1607 by Robert Cecil, 1st earl of Salisbury, and is still the seat of the Marquess of Salisbury.