Berkshire ::: Project ETERNITY

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  • West Berkshire
  • Reading
  • Wokingham
  • Bracknell Forest
  • Windsor and Maidenhead
  • Slough
  • Berkshire
    Geography
    Status:Ceremonial County and County
    |South East England
    Area:
    - Total
    Ranked 40th
    1,262 km²
    NUTS 3:UKJ11
    Demographics
    Population:
    - Total (2002 est.)
    - Density
    Ranked 25th
    803,566
    637 / km²
    |88.7% White
    6.8% S.Asian
    2.0% Afro-Carib.
    Politics
    Members of Parliament
    Jane Griffiths, Andrew Mackay, Fiona Mactaggart, Theresa May, John Redwood, David Rendel, Martin Salter, Michael Trend
    Districts
  • For other places named Berkshire, see: Berkshire (disambiguation)
  • Berkshire (pronounced Barkshe(e)r; sometimes abbreviated to Berks) is a county in the south of England, to the west of London and also bordering on Oxfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Greater London, Surrey, Wiltshire and Hampshire.

    It is also known as Royal Berkshire, and this title was made official with a grant in the 1930s. The county is one of the oldest in England, being reliably dated back to the setting of the county borders by King Alfred the Great of Wessex. Following the reorganisation of the counties in 1974, Abingdon (its former county town) and the Vale of the White Horse were transferred to Oxfordshire, Slough was added from Buckinghamshire, and Reading became the county town. On April 1, 1998 the county council was abolished and the districts became unitary authorities.

    The county takes its name from a large forest of birch trees that was called Bearroc (Celtic for 'hilly') and was originally a transaction of land to King Cenwalh of Wessex. At this time, it only consisted of the northerly and westerly parts of the current county.

    Places in Berkshire

    Main article: List of places in Berkshire

    Notable towns in Berkshire are:

  • Bracknell
  • Caversham
  • Hungerford
  • Maidenhead
  • Newbury
  • Reading
  • Windsor, home of Windsor Castle, and which gives its name to the House of Windsor
  • Wokingham
  • Towns no longer in Berkshire are:

  • Abingdon
  • Didcot
  • Wallingford
  • Wantage
  • Faringdon
  • External links

    *

    Copyrights

    This article uses material from the Wikipedia article "Berkshire".


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