Lichfield Tourism,
Lichfield Tourism, Tourist places in Lichfield, Sightseeing, Lichfield Travel Guide, Holiday Packages, weekend getaways, places near Lichfield, reviews, map and trips
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Lichfield Fast Facts
- State:
 - District: Lichfield
 - Famous for/as:
 - Population: 30,583
 - Area: 14.02 km2
 - Language: English
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 - Pincode:
 - STDCode: 01543
 
Lichfield, Overview
Lichfield is a city and civil parish in Staffordshire, England. One of seven civil parishes with city status in England, Lichfield has a population of 31,000 & is situated 16 miles north of Birmingham and 124 miles northwest of London.
Lichfield is notable for its three-spired cathedral and as the birthplace of Dr. Johnson, the writer of the first authoritative Dictionary of the English Language. A Dictionary of the English Language, one of the most influential dictionaries in the history of the English language, was prepared by Samuel Johnson and published on April 15, 1755. Lichfield is also the birthplace of Elias Ashmole (23 May 1617 – 18 May 1692). Elias was a celebrated English antiquary, politician, officer of arms, astrologer and student of alchemy. He supported the royalist side during the English Civil War, and at the restoration of Charles II he was rewarded with several lucrative offices. Throughout his life he was an avid collector of curiosities and other artifacts. Many of these he acquired from the traveller, botanist, and collector John Tradescant the Younger. Ashmole donated most of his collection, his antiquarian library and priceless manuscripts to the University of Oxford to create the Ashmolean Museum. Today Lichfield still retains its old importance as an ecclesiastical centre, but its industrial and commercial development has been relatively small; the centre of the city thus retains an essentially old-world character, with pockets of historic charm.
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Lichfield, History
The earliest evidence of settlement has been the discovery of  Mesolithic flints on the high ground of St Michael’s churchyard, which  may indicate an early flint industry. Traces of Neolithic settlement  have been discovered on the south side of the sandstone ridge occupied  by the Cathedral.
3.5 km (2.2 mi) south west of Lichfield, near the point where Ryknild  Street crosses Watling Street, was the site of the Roman town of  Letocetum. Established in 50 as a military fortress, by the 2nd century  it had become a civilian settlement with a bath house and a mansio.  Letocetum fell into decline by the 4th century and the Romans had left  by the 5th century. There have been scattered Romano-British finds in  Lichfield, and it is possible that a burial discovered beneath the  cathedral in 1751 was Romano-British. There is no evidence of what  happened to Letocetum after the Romans left; however Lichfield may have  emerged as the inhabitants of Letocetum relocated during its decline.
The early history of Lichfield is obscure. The first authentic record of  Lichfield occurs in Bede's history, where it is called Licidfelth and  mentioned as the place where St Chad fixed the episcopal see of the  Mercians in 669. The first Christian king of Mercia, King Wulfhere  donated land at Lichfield for Chad to build a monastery. It was because  of this that the ecclesiastical centre of the Diocese of Mercia became  settled at Lichfield, which was approximately 7 miles (11 km) north-west  of the seat of the Mercian kings at Tamworth. The first cathedral was  built on the present site in 700 when Bishop Hedda built a new church to  house the bones of St Chad, which had become a sacred shrine to many  pilgrims when he died in 672. The burial in the cathedral of the kings  of Mercia, King Wulfhere in 674 and King Ceolred in 716, further  increased the prestige of Lichfield. In 786 Offa, King of Mercia, raised  Lichfield to the dignity of an archbishopric, with authority over all  the bishops from the Humber to the Thames. However after King Offa's  death in 796, Lichfield's power waned and in 803 the primacy was  restored to Canterbury by Pope Leo III after only 16 years. The Historia  Britonum lists the city as one of the 28 cities of Britain around AD  833.
During the 9th century, the Kingdom of Mercia was devastated by the  Vikings from Denmark. Lichfield itself was unwalled and the cathedral  was despoiled, so Bishop Peter moved the see to the fortified and  wealthier Chester in 1075. His successor, Robert de Limesey, transferred  it to Coventry, but it was eventually restored to Lichfield in 1148.  Work began on the present Gothic cathedral in 1195. At the time of the  Domesday survey, Lichfield was held by the bishop of Chester, where the  see of the bishopric had been moved 10 years earlier; Lichfield was  listed as a small village. The lord of the manor was the bishop of  Chester until the reign of Edward VI.
Bishop Clinton was responsible for transforming the scattered  settlements to the south of Minster Pool into the ladder plan streets we  recognise today. Market Street, Wade Street, Bore Street and Frog Lane  linked Dam Street, Conduit Street and Bakers Lane on one side with Bird  Street and St John Street on the other. Bishop Clinton also fortified  the cathedral close and enclosed the town with a bank and ditch, and  gates were set up where roads into the town crossed the ditch. In 1291  Lichfield was severely damaged by a fire which destroyed most of the  town; however the Cathedral and Close survived unscathed. In 1387  Richard II gave a charter for the foundation of the gild of St Mary and  St John the Baptist; this gild functioned as the local government, until  its dissolution by Edward VI, who incorporated the town in 1548.
Henry VIII had a dramatic effect on Lichfield. The Reformation brought  the disappearance of pilgrim traffic following the destruction of St  Chad's shrine in 1538 which was a major loss to the city's economic  prosperity. That year too the Franciscan Friary was dissolved, the site  becoming a private estate. Further economic decline followed the  outbreak of plague in 1593, which resulted in the death of over a third  of the entire population.
Three people were burned at the stake for heresy under Mary I. The last  public burning at the stake in England took place in Lichfield, when  Edward Wightman from Burton upon Trent was executed by burning in the  Market Place on 11 April 1612 for his activities promoting himself as  the divine Paraclete and Saviour of the world. In the English Civil War,  Lichfield was divided. The cathedral authorities, with a certain  following, were for the king, but the townsfolk generally sided with the  Parliament. This led to the fortification of the close in 1643.  Lichfield's position as a focus of supply routes had an important  strategic significance during the war, and both forces were anxious for  control of the city. Lord Brooke, notorious for his hostility to the  church, led an assault against it, but was killed by a deflected bullet  on St Chad's day, an accident welcomed as a miracle by the Royalists.  The close yielded and was retaken by Prince Rupert of the Rhine in this  year; but on the breakdown of the king's cause in 1646 it again  surrendered. The cathedral suffered extensive damage from the war,  including the complete destruction of the central spire. It was restored  at the Restoration under the supervision of Bishop Hacket, and thanks  in part to the generosity of King Charles II
Lichfield started to develop a lively coaching trade as a stop-off on  the busy route between London and Chester from the 1650s onwards, making  it Staffordshire's most prosperous town. In the 18th century, and  reaching its peak in the period from 1800—1840, the city thrived as a  busy coaching city on the main routes from London to the north-west and  Birmingham to the north-east. It also became a centre of great  intellectual activity, being the home of many famous people including  Samuel Johnson, David Garrick, Erasmus Darwin and Anna Seward; this  prompted Johnson's remark that Lichfield was "a city of philosophers".  In the 1720s Daniel Defoe described Lichfield as 'a fine, neat,  well-built, and indifferent large city', the principal town in the  region after Chester. During the late 18th and early 19th century much  of the medieval city was rebuilt with the red brick Georgian style  buildings we see today. Also during this time the city underwent vast  improvements with underground sewerage systems, paved streets and gas  powered street lighting. An infantry regiment of the British Army was  formed at Lichfield in 1705 by Col. Luke Lillingstone in the King's Head  pub in Bird Street. In 1751 it became the 38th Regiment of Foot and in  1783 the 1st Staffordshire Regiment; after reorganization in 1881 it  became the 1st battalion of the South Staffordshire Regiment.


