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Encyclopedia > Fens

The Fens may also refer to the Back Bay Fens, park in Boston, Massachusetts.


The Fens are an area of wetlands in the counties of Cambridgeshire, Lincolnshire and Norfolk in England, west and south of The Wash. They now cover approximately 1,300 kmē (320,000 acres), but in 1911 the Encyclopaedia Britannica estimated their extent as being considerably over half a million acres (2,000 kmē). Geologically, the fenlands are a silted-up bay of the North Sea that embrace the lower drainage basins of the rivers Witham, Welland, Nene and Great Ouse. Wisbech is known as the "Capital of the Fens".


300 years ago, the Fens were similar to the Florida Everglades, a large area of low-lying land. The Fens and fenmen have a distinctive history and unique cultural characteristics. The native fenmen moved about nimbly on stilts (the "stilt-walkers"), fought off outsiders and defended their valuable traditional rights of commonage, turfcutting, fishing and fowling. The area was reputed to be a haven for outlaws, including Hereward the Wake, the last Anglo-Saxon resistance fighter against the Normans.

Contents

Draining the Fens

Though some marks of Roman hydraulics survive, the land started to be drained in earnest during the 1640s. Two cuts were made in the Cambridgeshire Fens to join the River Great Ouse to the sea at King's Lynn - the Old Bedford River and the New Bedford River, also known as the Hundred Foot Drain. Both cuts were named after the Fourth Earl of Bedford who, along with some "Gentlemen Adventurers" (venture capitalists), funded the construction, which was directed by engineers from the Low Countries, and were rewarded with large grants of the resulting farmland. The major draining of the Fens, nevertheless, was effected in the late 18th and early 19th century, involving fierce local rioting and sabotage of the works.


These days, deprived of periodic deposits of silt, much of the Fens lies below sea level. The effect of the drainage schemes has drained water from the peat, which has shrunk, the highest point now being only a few meters above sea level, and only sizable embankments of the rivers, dikes and flood defences, stop the land from being inundated.


Restoring the Fens

In 2003, a project was initiated to return parts of the Fens to their original pre-agricultural state. Traditionally the periodic flooding by the North Sea, which renewed the character of the fenlands, was characterized as "ravaged by serious inundations of the sea, for example, in the years 1178, 1248 (or 1250), 1288, 1322, 1335, 1467, 1571" (Encyclopaedia Britannica 1911). In the modern approach, farmland is to be allowed to flood again and turned into nature reserves. Organizers of the Great Fen Project hope to encourage species such as the snipe, lapwing and bittern. Endangered species such as the fen violet will be seeded.


Protected by the impassable fens, members of the monastic orders began to settle in isolated localities on higher ground after about the middle of the 7th century and built churches, monasteries and abbeys, moderately safe from the raids of Vikings and Danes (9th and 10th centuries). Ely Cathedral, on a rise of ground surrounded by fenlands, is known as the "Ship of the Fens".


Fen settlements

Many historic cities, towns and villages have grown up in the fens, cited chiefly on the few areas of raised ground. These include

Ancient sites include

The Romans constructed the road Fen Causeway across the fens to join East Anglia to central England.


Setting in fiction

The novels The Nine Tailors by Dorothy Sayers, and Waterland by Graham Swift are located here.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
The Fens (248 words)
The Fens is an area of wetlands in the counties of Cambridgeshire and Lincolnshire in England.
In 2003, a project was initiated to return parts of the Fens to their original pre-agricultural state.
Wisbech is known as the "Capital of the Fens".
The Fens - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (2673 words)
The Fens, also known as the Fenland, are an area of former wetlands in the eastern part of England, stretching along the coast of Lincolnshire to Kings Lynn and reaching into the counties of Cambridgeshire, Lincolnshire and Norfolk.
The dark peat land of the fen and the moor of East Fen lies inland from the silt while the peat of West Fen lies further inland still, beyond the Devensian moraine at Stickney.
There is evidence for human settlement near the fens from mesolithic period on; indeed, the evidence suggests that mesolithic settlement in Cambridgeshire was particularly along the fen-edges and on the low islands within the fens, to take advantage of the hunting and fishing opportunities of the wetlands.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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