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Parham is a civil parish in the Horsham District of West Sussex, England. There was a village of Parham, around the parish church but its few houses having been destroyed in the early 19th century to create the modern landscaped park and gardens. The parish now consists of Parham Park and the farms and smaller settlements around it. The village is between Wiggonholt and Cootham, about south of Pulborough on the A283 road. The parish covers . The 2001 Census recorded 214 people living in 95 households, of whom 124 were economically active.〔 The civil parish includes the hamlets of Rackham, southwest of Parham Park, and Wiggonholt on the A283 to the north, which has a small parish church. ==History== The Church of England parish church of Saint Peter has a blocked two-bay arcade in the north wall of the nave that shows there used to be a north aisle.〔Nairn & Pevsner, 1965, page 292〕 The lower part of the bell-tower is Perpendicular Gothic and the south chapel remains as it was built in 1545, but the remainder of the building was remodelled in the Georgian Gothick fashion in about 1820.〔 The font is a rare lead one from the middle of the 14th century, repeatedly inscribed with the legend ''IHS Nazar'' and the arms of Sir Andrew Peverel, who was a Knight of the Shire in 1351.〔 Parham Park originated as a grange of Westminster Abbey.〔Nairn & Pevsner, 1965, page 290〕 After the Dissolution of the Monasteries it was converted into a south-facing E-shaped Elizabethan country house.〔Nairn & Pevsner, 1965, pages 290–291〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Parham, West Sussex」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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