Travel to Ely, Cambridgeshire Map

Ely, Cambridgeshire tourist guide map of landmarks & destinations by Walkfo


Travel Ely, Cambridgeshire Map Explore
34
travel
spots

Travel to Ely, CambridgeshireWhen travelling to Ely, Cambridgeshire, Walkfo’s has created a travel guide & Ely, Cambridgeshire overview of Ely, Cambridgeshire’s hotels & accommodation, Ely, Cambridgeshire’s weather through the seasons & travel destinations / landmarks in Ely, Cambridgeshire. Experience a unique Ely, Cambridgeshire when you travel with Walkfo as your tour guide to Ely, Cambridgeshire map.


Ely, Cambridgeshire history


Pre-history

Roswell Pits are a palaeontologically significant Site of Special Scientific Interest. The Jurassic Kimmeridge Clays were quarried in the 19th and 20th centuries for the production of pottery and for maintenance of river embankments.

Name

The origin and meaning of Ely’s name have always been regarded as obscure by place-name scholars. The earliest record of the name is in the Latin text of Bede’s Ecclesiastical History of the English People. In Old English charters and in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, the spelling is usually Elig. Skeat derived the name Ely from what he called “O[ld] Northumbrian” ēlġē, meaning “district of eels”

Medieval period

The city’s origins lay in the foundation of an abbey in 673, one mile (1.6 km) to the north of Cratendune on the Isle of Ely, under the protection of Saint Etheldreda, daughter of King Anna. The first Norman bishop, Simeon, started building the cathedral in 1083. The octagon was rebuilt by sacrist Alan of Walsingham between 1322 and 1328 after the collapse of the original nave crossing on 22 February 1322. Ely’s octagon is considered “one of the wonders of the medieval world”.

Protestant martyrs

Following the accession of Mary I of England to the throne in 1553, the papacy made its first effective efforts to enforce the Pope Paul III-initiated Catholic reforms in England. During this time, which became known as the Marian Persecutions, two men from Wisbech, constable William Wolsey and painter Robert Pygot, “were accused of not … believing that the body and blood of Christ were present in the bread and wine of the sacrament of mass”. For this Christian heresy they were condemned by the bishop’s chancellor, John Fuller, on 9 October 1555. On 16 October 1555 they were burnt at the stake “probably on the Palace Green in front of Ely Cathedral”. In The Book of Ely published in 1990, Blakeman writes that “permission was not given” for a memorial to the martyrs to be placed on Palace Green. In 2011, a plaque recording this martyrdom event was erected on the northeast corner of Palace Green by the City of Ely Perspective. The plaque is located 2 inches from the pavement floor in an obscure, easily missed corner. Oliver Cromwell Oliver Cromwell lived in Ely from 1636 to 1646 after inheriting St Mary’s vicarage, a sixteenth-century property—now known as Oliver Cromwell’s House— from his mother’s brother, Sir Thomas Steward. It is possible to visit this house today.[4] During this time Cromwell was a tax collector, though was also one of the governors of Thomas Parsons’ Charity, which dates back to 1445 and was granted a Royal Charter by Charles I of England. The Charity still provides grants and housing to deserving local applicants. There was a form of early workhouse in 1687, perhaps at St Mary’s, which may have been part of an arrangement made between the Ely people and a Nicholas Wythers of Norwich in 1675. He was paid £30 per annum to employ the poor to “spin jersey” and was to pay them in money not goods. A purpose-built workhouse was erected in 1725 for 35 inmates on what is now St Mary’s Court. Four other workhouses existed, including Holy Trinity on Fore Hill for 80 inmates (1738–1956) and the Ely Union workhouse, built in 1837, which housed up to 300 inmates. The latter became Tower Hospital in 1948 and is now a residential building, Tower Court. Two other former workhouses were the Haven Quayside for unmarried mothers and another on the site of what is now the Hereward Hall in Silver Street. Post-medieval decline The diaries of writers and journalists such as William Camden, Celia Fiennes, Daniel Defoe, John Byng and William Cobbett illustrate the decline of Ely after the 14th century plague and the 16th century reformation which led to the dissolution of the monastery in 1539. In the 1607 edition of Britannia, chorographic surveyor William Camden records that “as for Ely it selfe, it is no small Citie, or greatly to be counted off either for beauty or frequency and resort, as having an unwholsome aire by reason of the fens round about”. In 1698, Celia Fiennes was writing “the Bishop [Simon Patrick] does not Care to stay long in this place not being for his health … they have lost their Charter … and its a shame [the Bishop] does not see it better ordered and y buildings and streetes put in a better Condition. They are a slothful people and for little but y takeing Care of their Grounds and Cattle w is of vast advantage”. Daniel Defoe, when writing in the Eastern Counties section of A tour thro’ the whole island of Great Britain (1722), went “to Ely, whose cathedral, standing in a level flat country, is seen far and wide … that some of it is so antient, totters so much with every gust of wind, looks so like a decay, and seems so near it, that when ever it does fall, all that ’tis likely will be thought strange in it, will be, that it did not fall a hundred years sooner”. John Howard (prison reformer) visited Ely and described the conditions in The Gaol:- ‘This gaol the property of the bishop, who is lord of the franchise of the Isle of Ely, was in part rebuilt by the late bishop about ten years ago; upon complaint of the cruel method* which for want of a safe gaol, the Keeper took to secure his prisoners (*This was by chaining them down upon their backs on a floor, across which were several iron bars and iron collar with spikes about their neck). The gaoler John Allday did not receive a salary’. He records that the number of debtors outnumbered the number of felons in the prison. On his way to a Midlands tour, John Byng visited Ely on 5 July 1790 staying at the Lamb Inn. In his diary he writes that “the town [Ely] is mean, to the extreme … those withdrawn, their dependancies must decay”. Recording in his Rural Rides on 25 March 1830, William Cobbett reports that “Ely is what one may call a miserable little town: very prettily situated, but poor and mean. Everything seems to be on the decline, as, indeed, is the case everywhere, where the clergy are the masters”. The Ely and Littleport riots occurred between 22 and 24 May 1816. At the Special Commission assizes, held at Ely between 17 and 22 June 1816, twenty-four rioters were condemned. Nineteen had their sentences variously commuted from penal transportation for life to twelve-months imprisonment; the remaining five were executed on 28 June 1816.

Victorian and twentieth-century regeneration

Ely, Cambridgeshire Victorian and twentieth-century regeneration photo

Ely Cathedral was “the first great cathedral to be thoroughly restored” Work commenced in 1845 and was completed nearly thirty years later. The only pavement labyrinth to be found in an English cathedral was installed below the west tower in 1870.

Liberty of Ely

The abbey at Ely was one of many which were refounded in the Benedictine reforms of King Edgar the Peaceful (943–975) The “special and peculiarly ancient” honour and freedoms given to Ely by charter at that time may have been intended to award only fiscal privilege. These rights were reconfirmed in charters granted by Edward the Confessor and in William the Conqueror’s confirmation of the old English liberty at Kenford.

  

Ely, Cambridgeshire map & travel guide with history & landmarks to explore


Visit Ely, Cambridgeshire Walkfo Stats

With 34 travel places to explore on our Ely, Cambridgeshire travel map, Walkfo is a personalised tour guide to tell you about the places in Ely, Cambridgeshire as you travel by foot, bike, car or bus. No need for a physical travel guide book or distractions by phone screens, as our geo-cached travel content is automatically triggered on our Ely, Cambridgeshire map when you get close to a travel location (or for more detailed Ely, Cambridgeshire history from Walkfo).


Travel Location:
Travel Area:
Ely, Cambridgeshire
[zonearea]
Audio spots:
Physical plaques:
34
5
Population:

[zonesize]

  

Average seasonal temperatures at zone



Tourist Guide to Ely, Cambridgeshire Map


 

  Ely, Cambridgeshire map historic spot

  Ely, Cambridgeshire map tourist destination

  Ely, Cambridgeshire map plaque

  Ely, Cambridgeshire map geographic feature

Walkfo Ely, Cambridgeshire travel map key: visit National Trust sites, Blue Plaques, English Heritage locations & top travel destinations in Ely, Cambridgeshire