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Bow, Devon : ウィキペディア英語版
Bow, Devon

Bow (Latin: ''place at the arched bridge'') is a village and civil parish in the Mid Devon district of Devon, England, about 8 miles west of Crediton. According to the 2001 census it had a population of 1,093 practically unchanged at the 2011 Census. There is an adjoining hamlet of Nymet Tracey which shares a church with Bow and much common history. ''Bow'' is a major part of Upper Yeo electoral ward. The total ward population at the above census was 1,708.
==History==
There is a 3rd millennium BC woodhenge west of the village. Its 19 post holes were discovered by aerial photography in 1984.〔Shirley Toulson, The Companion Guide to Devon, ISBN 0-00-215135-9〕〔(Bow Henge )〕 It is believed to have been a centre of pagan worship for a large area of surrounding countryside. The name ''Nymet'' means "Sacred Grove" in Celtic and is associated in Roman terms with the Druids. The word Nymet is preserved in many surrounding place names (e.g. Nymet Barton, Nymet Rowland, Broad Nymet). The River Yeo, which used to be called the Nymet, flows through the "arched bridge" at the bottom of the village
The main settlement was originally at Nymet Tracey, a mile south of Bow's present location. Nymet Tracey had parliamentary representation in late Anglo-Saxon times, from 940 onwards〔(Bow community page )〕 and is mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086.
The name Tracey comes from the 'de Tracey' family - from Tracy-sur-Mer near Bayeux - which settled in the area after the Norman Conquest of 1066. The face of a de Tracey knight is carved over the south entrance to the church at Nymet Tracey. The knight may be a representation of William de Tracy, who is said to have who founded the church in penance for the murder of Thomas Becket,〔Arthur Mee, ''The King's England, Devon: Cradle of our Seamen''〕〔 although there is no independent evidence for this beyond local tradition.〔''The Church of St. Bartholomew'', Church leaflet, 2005〕 The church is dedicated to St Bartholomew, and has been since at least 1742. It may have previously been dedicated to St Mary, or St Martin.
In 1258-59 Henry de Tracey was granted charters for a weekly market and a three-day annual fair starting on St Martin's Day. The market was held on the main Crediton to Okehampton road (now the A3072), and so Bow was born. The A3072 road is almost certainly a Roman road, although not the first in the area. The first was south of the village, and runs from the Roman fort at North Tawton to Isca (Exeter).
Charles I stayed one night in Bow during the Civil War when he was chasing the Earl of Essex into Cornwall.
Bow, due to its location, failed to attract enough trade to justify its status as a town and remained a street village or one of Devon's many "failed towns".〔〔W.G. Hoskins, ''Devon and its people'', Wheaton, Exeter, 1959〕 The market ceased in 1792. Nymet Tracey was effectively absorbed into Bow following two fires which destroyed Nymet Tracey (then about 60-80 cottages) in 1833 and 1835, after which the bulk of the populace of Nymet Tracey moved to Bow. Nymet Tracey's church, St Martin's at the time, continued to serve Bow.〔(Bow Genealogy )〕 The influx of people did not halt its decline and by 1850 Bow/Nymet Tracey was described as a "small, decayed market town";〔(''White's Devonshire Directory (1850)'' )〕 the St Martin's Day fair, first recorded in 1259,〔 ceased c.1900.
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries Bow was spiritually divided between the Church of England, the Congregationalists and the Plymouth Brethren.〔Grace Griffiths, ''My Days of Freedom'', ISBN 0-437-06500-6. Describes life growing up in and around Bow in the 1920s〕

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