| A 
            history of Nottinghamshire | 
             
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              | Farming 
                landscape | 
             
              | The 
                rolling countryside of Nottinghamshire has been farmed for thousands 
                of years. Aerial photographs show evidence of field patterns dating 
                back to pre-Roman times in north Nottinghamshire. | 
             
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              | Open 
                fields | 
             
              | 
                  In the medieval 
                period most villagers farmed their land on an open-field system. 
                Each farmer worked scattered "strips" of land among 
                several large, unhedged fields. At Laxton the fields are still 
                farmed this way. 
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                    | Laxton 
                      fields |  | 
            
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              | All 
                change | 
             
              | Elsewhere 
                  the end of the open system came in the 18th century when fields 
                  were "enclosed" by acts of Parliament. Individual 
                  plots were distributed between farmers. Hedges and farmhouses 
                  began to dominate the countryside. In modern 
                  times industrial farming has resulted in the loss of many hedgerows 
                  and woodland although conservation bodies are campaigning to 
                  preserve important areas of natural and historic landscape. | 
             
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              | Country 
                houses | 
             
              | 
                  Although many country 
            houses have vanished from history there are some which survive to 
            this day. Sir Francis Willoughby used income from land and coal deposits 
            to build Wollaton 
            Hall, just outside Nottingham, in the 1580s. 
                    
                |  |   
                    | Wollaton 
                      Hall |  | 
             
              | Nice 
                place | 
             
              
          | Several 
            houses were built following the dissolution (closure) of religious 
            houses, including Welbeck Abbey, Rufford Abbey and Newstead Abbey, 
            which became home to the Byron 
            family. | 
             
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              | In 
                Victorian times the eccentric 5th Duke of Portland lived at Welbeck. 
                He built a network of subterranean rooms, including a chapel and 
                ballroom. | 
             
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                    | Clumber 
                      Park |   Built in 
                  the 1770s, Clumber was the "seat" of the powerful 
                  Dukes of Newcastle. Although demolished in 1938, the National 
                  Trust now has its regional office in the outbuildings.  A number 
                  of other Victorian houses have also survived, including Kelham 
                  Hall, which is now the offices of Newark and Sherwood District 
                  Council, and Bestwood Lodge, now used as a hotel. | 
             
              
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