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Christchurch Park : ウィキペディア英語版
Christchurch Park

Christchurch Park is a area of rolling lawns, wooded areas, and delicately created arboreta in central Ipswich, Suffolk, England. It contains Christchurch Mansion which holds a public museum and art gallery. The park opened as the town's first public park in 1895.
==History==

From the 12th century the park was the site of the Augustinian Priory of the Holy Trinity. In 1536 the Priory's estates were seized by the crown during Henry VIII's Dissolution of the Monasteries. The land was purchased by a London merchant, Paul Withipoll in 1545, and between 1548 and 1550 his son Edmund had the priory demolished and built Christchurch Mansion in its place.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Christchurch Park - A Chronological History )〕 The Mansion remains the impressive Tudor centrepiece of the park and contains a museum, art gallery and tea room.
Apart from a small disused lion's head water fountain provided for the poor of Ipswich by the Augustinians, there is no trace left of the priory buildings, although the Round Pond and Wilderness Pond in the park are thought to have originally stocked fish for the monks. St Margaret's Church, which was built by the monks in the 13th century and which served as church and burial place to the lords of the Manor, is also still standing in a corner of the park on St Margaret's Plain.
During the 1560s there was an ongoing dispute with the Ipswich Corporation in relation to various alterations carried out and public access to the annual fair.〔 In 1567 Edmund Withypoll constructed a new pond, now known as the 'Wilderness Pond'. Queen Elizabeth I was stayed at the mansion for six days during August 1561.〔Twinch (2008), page 57〕 She returned to the town for four days in 1575.〔
Edmunds's granddaughter Elizabeth Withipoll married Leicester Devereux, 6th Viscount Hereford and the mansion passed to the Devereux family, who rebuilt the upper floors after a fire in about 1670, when the main porch was also added.〔Norwich (1985), page 595〕 Claude Fonnereau bought the Christchurch estate in 1734 which at the time totaled more than of land (today's park covers about 82 acres).〔 By 1772 the public were granted some access to the park and tried to introduce keys for those who would sign an agreement with conditions of entry.〔
Following efforts by the Ipswich Corporation to find land for a public park in 1848 W.C. Fonnereau leased to the corporation from 1851 who developed the arboretum in the same year that the park was visited by Prince Albert.〔 By 1895 the mansion was owned by Felix Cobbold who offered to give it to the corporation on condition that the corporation purchased the rest of the grounds. A deal was concluded and the park opened to the public on 11 April 1895.〔
The park contains memorials to the Ipswich Martyrs which was installed in 1903. The war memorial to servicemen lost during the Boer War, World War I was moved to the park from cornhill in 1924. The corporation acquire the upper arboretum in 1928.〔
The Great Storm of 1987 which affected most parts of the United Kingdom had drastic effects on the park, destroying around 230 trees including the last remaining elm.
In 2004, the park received a £4.2 million grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund for a programme of extensive renovation and restoration of its facilities and historical features. This renovation includes the 2006 draining of both the 'round' and 'wilderness' ponds in order to remove the five foot of silt that has collected over the past 80 years.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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