Bedfordshire

Bedfordshire
/bed"feuhrd shear', -sheuhr/, n.
a county in central England. 489,500; 477 sq. mi. (1235 sq. km). Also called Bedford, Beds.

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Administrative (pop., 2001: 381,571), geographic, and historic county, southeast-central England.

Much of the county is occupied by the River Ouse valley; its capital is Bedford. Settled с 1800 BC by the Beaker culture, the valley was resettled by the Romans in the 1st–5th centuries AD. First mentioned as a political unit in 1010, the county has survived virtually unchanged within its present boundaries. Its architectural masterpiece is Woburn Abbey, seat of the dukes of Bedford.

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      administrative, geographic, and historic county of the southeastern Midlands of England. The county town (seat) is Bedford. The administrative county is divided into three districts: Mid Bedfordshire, South Bedfordshire, and the borough of Bedford. These districts cover largely rural areas centred, respectively, on the towns of Ampthill, Dunstable, and Bedford. The geographic county of Bedfordshire also includes the unitary authority of Luton.

      The historic county coincides roughly in area with the geographic county, but its boundary departs from that of the administrative county in three places. The town of Linslade in South Bedfordshire district of the administrative county lies in the historic county of Buckinghamshire, and a small area north of Sandy in Mid Bedfordshire district belongs to the historic county of Cambridgeshire. The historic county of Bedfordshire, however, includes the town of Eaton Socon, which lies in Huntingdonshire district in the administrative county of Cambridgeshire.

      Much of the county is occupied by the broad valley of the River Ouse and its tributaries, but at its southern extremity the chalk ridge known as the Chiltern Hills cuts across the county on a southwest-northeast alignment. Below the chalk scarp lies a clay vale, whose materials are extensively worked for large-scale brickmaking. Apart from the easily flooded valley bottoms and a belt of light sands, the county is largely cultivated, and milk and vegetables for the London market, 40–50 miles (70–80 km) to the south, are the principal products.

      Settlement in Bedfordshire is very ancient. In the early Bronze Age (c. 1800 BCE) the Beaker people (Beaker folk), immigrants from the eastern Mediterranean with a highly developed culture, settled in the Ouse valley. Roman settlement (1st–5th centuries CE) was concentrated in the south of the county, with Dunstable (Roman Durocobrivae) as an important route centre. After the Roman withdrawal the area was settled by invading Anglo-Saxons and Danes; Bedford itself was founded by Danes. The shire was first mentioned as a political unit in 1010.

      The urbanized southern fringe of the county contains the towns of Luton and Dunstable, once noted for the manufacture of straw hats but now for the production of a wide variety of industrial goods. These include motor vehicles, some of which are marketed under the trade name of Bedford. Luton represents the outermost fringe of the London industrial region. Situated 30 miles (48 km) from central London, it is on a major rail route and beside the motorway to the north, and it possesses one of London's overflow airports. The county has long-standing connections with aerospace industries, and the College of Aeronautics is in Cranfield.

      The outstanding architectural masterpiece of the county is Woburn Abbey, seat of the dukes of Bedford. The present structure dates from 1747 and is surrounded by a magnificent park of 3,000 acres (1,200 hectares). A second house of special distinction is Luton Hoo, near Luton, designed by Robert Adam in 1762; both it and Woburn are open to the public. Area administrative county, 460 square miles (1,192 square km); geographic county, 477 square miles (1,236 square km). Pop. (2005 est.) administrative county, 397,700; geographic county, 582,600.

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Universalium. 2010.

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