Romsley (Worcestershire, England)

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  • Place
| מספר מערכת 987007567477105171
Information for Authority record
Name (Latin)
Romsley (Worcestershire, England)
Other forms of name
nne Romsley (Hereford and Worcester, England)
nne Romsley (Hereford and Worcester)
Coordinates
-2.052880555 -2.052880555 52.41348889 52.41348889 (gooearth )
Associated country
Great Britain
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
VIAF: 124448386
Wikidata: Q7363330
Library of congress: n 88278546
Sources of Information
  • Forward Publicity Ltd. The official street plan for the district of Bromsgrove, 1981(Romsley)
  • LC database, 12-5-88(hdg.: Romsley (Hereford and Worcester))
  • Barth. gaz. of places in Brit., 1986(Romsley, Hereford and Worcester, vil.; cites 1 other)
  • Ordnance Survey Web site, May 29, 2002(Romsley, Worcestershire; 52p0s24.8ʹN 02p0s03.1ʹW)
Wikipedia description:

Romsley is a village and civil parish in the Bromsgrove District of Worcestershire, England, on the east side of the Clent Hills about 4 miles south of Halesowen. In 2001 it had a population of 1,601. The parish church, dedicated to Saint Kenelm is a Grade I listed building. The nave of the church continues directly into the chancel, both are from the 12th century and built of red sandstone. A 15th-century tower is of greenish sandstone, and the church has a timber porch. The chancel is built over a crypt that once contained the shrine of St Kenelm. A spring marks the reputed site of his martyrdom. The village and its area attract walkers, campers, and caravanners on the Clent and Walton Hills and on the Cuckoos Corner site. The main road that runs through Romsley is called Bromsgrove Road. There are limited local amenities including a post office, a butcher, a pub-restaurant, and a hairdresser. Romsley features in Geoffrey Hill's long poem The Triumph of Love:

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