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Chiltern Hills

The Chiltern Hills are a chalk escarpment in the UK[1] northwest of London, covering 660 square miles (1,700 km2) across Oxfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Hertfordshire, and Bedfordshire, stretching 45 miles (72 km) from Goring-on-Thames in the southwest to Hitchin in the northeast. The hills are 12 miles (19 km) at their widest.

Chiltern Hills
Highest point
PeakHaddington Hill
Elevation267 m (876 ft)
Dimensions
Length74 km (46 mi)
Width18 km (11 mi)
Area1,700 km2 (660 sq mi)
Geography
Location of the Chiltern Hills AONB in England
LocationSoutheast of England
East of England
CountryUnited Kingdom
CountiesBedfordshire
Buckinghamshire
Hertfordshire
Oxfordshire
Range coordinates51°40′N 0°55′W / 51.667°N 0.917°W / 51.667; -0.917
Geology
Type of rockchalk downland

In 1965, almost half of the Chiltern Hills was designated as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB). The northwest boundary is clearly defined by the escarpment. The dip slope is by definition more gradual, and merges with the landscape to the southeast.[2] The southwest endpoint is the River Thames. The hills decline slowly in prominence in northeast Bedfordshire.[3][4]

Geology edit

 
Chalk visible in ploughed soil at the foot of the Chiltern Hill escarpment near Shirburn on the Buckinghamshire/Oxfordshire border

The chalk escarpment of the Chiltern Hills overlooks the Vale of Aylesbury and roughly coincides with the southernmost extent of the ice sheet during the Anglian glacial maximum.[citation needed] The Chiltern Hills are part of a system of chalk downlands throughout eastern and southern England, formed between 65 and 95 million years ago,[3] comprising rocks of the Chalk Group; this also includes Salisbury Plain, Cranborne Chase, the Isle of Wight and the South Downs in the south. In the north, the chalk formations continue northeastwards across Hertfordshire, Norfolk and the Lincolnshire Wolds, finally ending as the Yorkshire Wolds in a prominent escarpment, south of the Vale of Pickering. The beds of the Chalk Group were deposited over the buried northwestern margin of the Anglo-Brabant Massif during the Late Cretaceous.[5] During this time, sources for siliciclastic sediment had been eliminated due to the exceptionally high sea level.[6] The formation is thinner through the Chiltern Hills than the chalk strata to the north and south and deposition was tectonically controlled, with the Lilley Bottom structure playing a significant role at times.[5] The Chalk Group, like the underlying Gault Clay and Upper Greensand, is diachronous.[6]

During the late stages of the Alpine Orogeny, as the African Plate collided with Eurasian Plate, Mesozoic extensional structures, such as the Weald Basin of southern England, underwent structural inversion.[5] This phase of deformation tilted the chalk strata to the southeast in the area of the Chiltern Hills. The gently dipping beds of rock were eroded, forming an escarpment.

The chalk strata are frequently interspersed with layers of flint nodules which apparently replaced chalk and infilled pore spaces early in the diagenetic history. Flint has been mined for millennia from the Chiltern Hills.[7] They were first extracted for fabrication into flint axes in the Neolithic period, then for knapping into flintlocks. Nodules are to be seen everywhere in the older houses as a construction material for walls.

Physical characteristics edit

Topography edit

 
Viewed from The Ridgeway: eastern trailhead on Ivinghoe Beacon

The highest point is at 267 m (876 ft.) above sea level at Haddington Hill near Wendover in Buckinghamshire; a stone monument marks the summit. The nearby Ivinghoe Beacon is a more prominent hill, although its altitude is only 249 m (817 ft.).[8] It is the starting point of the Icknield Way Path and the Ridgeway long-distance path, which follows the line of the Chiltern Hill for many miles to the west, where they merge with the Wiltshire downs and southern Cotswolds. To the east of Ivinghoe Beacon is Dunstable Downs, a steep section of the Chiltern scarp. Near Wendover is Coombe Hill, 260 m (852 ft.) above sea level. The more gently sloping country – the dip slope – to the southeast of the Chiltern scarp is also generally referred to as part of the Chiltern Hills; it contains much beech woodland[1] and many villages.

Landscape and land use edit

Enclosed fields account for almost 66% of the "Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty" (AONB) area. The next most important, and archetypal, landscape form is woodland, covering 21% of the Chiltern Hills, which is thus one of the most heavily wooded areas in England. Built-up areas (settlements and industry) make up over 5% of the land area; parks and gardens nearly 4%, open land (commons, heaths and downland) is 2%, and the remaining 2% includes a variety of uses, including communications, military, open land, recreation, utilities and water.[3]

Rivers edit

The Chiltern Hills are almost entirely located within the River Thames drainage basin, and also drain towards several major Thames tributaries, most notably the Lea, which rises in the eastern Chiltern Hills, the Colne to the south, and the Thame to the north and west. Other rivers arising near the Chiltern Hills include the Mimram, the Ver, the Gade, the Bulbourne, the Chess, the Misbourne and the Wye. These are classified as chalk streams, although the Lea is degraded by water from road drains and sewage treatment works.[9] The Thames flows through a gap between the Berkshire Downs and the Chiltern Hills. Portions around Leighton Buzzard and Hitchin are drained by the Ouzel, the Flit and the Hiz, all of which ultimately flow into the River Great Ouse (the last two via the Ivel).

Transport edit

 
Stokenchurch Gap, a cutting built to carry the M40 motorway through a section of the Chiltern Hills

Several transport routes pass through the Chiltern Hills in natural or human-made corridors. There are also over 2,000 km (1,200 mi) of public footpaths in the Chiltern Hills, including long-distance trackways such as the Icknield Way and The Ridgeway.[10] The M40 motorway passes through the Chiltern Hills in Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire sections with a deep cutting through the Stokenchurch Gap. The M1 motorway crosses the Bedfordshire section near Luton. Other major roads include the A41 and the A413.

The Chiltern Main Line Railway via High Wycombe and Princes Risborough, the London to Aylesbury Line via Amersham, the West Coast Main Line via Berkhamsted, and the Midland Main Line all run through the Chiltern Hills. The Great Western Main Line and its branches such as the Henley and Marlow branch lines link the southern side of the Chiltern Hills with London Paddington. The Chinnor and Princes Risborough Railway is a preserved line.

High Speed 2 (HS2) will pass underneath the Chiltern Hills in the Chiltern tunnel. This tunnel, the longest under construction on the HS2 route, will be 16 km (9.9 miles) in length.[11] The Conservation Board has made clear it was opposed to the routing of HS2 through the Chiltern Hills AONB.[12][13]

Bus services are provided by Arriva Shires & Essex and Carousel Buses. Air corridors from Luton Airport pass over the Chiltern Hills.

Apart from the River Thames, there are no navigable rivers. The Grand Union Canal passes through the Chiltern Hills between Berkhamsted and Marsworth following the course of the Gade and Bulbourne. Also, after crossing a watershed, the Ouzel is partly in the Chiltern Hills.

History edit

 
Bottle kiln, Nettlebed, probably from the late 17th century
 
Watlington Town Hall

During the Iron Age, the Chiltern ridge provided a relatively safe and easily navigable route across southern Britain. The toponym, Chiltern, is believed to be Brittonic in origin. According to Eilert Ekwall, Chiltern is possibly related to the broader ethnic name Celt (Celtæ in early Celtic languages); the root celto- "high" (and suffix -erno-) could provide the origin of Chiltern.[14]

Before the 18th century, the population lived dispersed across the largely rural landscape of the Chiltern Hills in remote villages, hamlets, farmsteads, and market towns along the main turnpike routes which coursed through the navigable valleys. The development of canals in the 18th century and railways in the 19th century encouraged settlement and the growth of High Wycombe, Tring, and Luton. Significant housing and industrial development took place in the first half of the 20th century and continued throughout the 20th century.

In 1965 almost half of the Chiltern Hills was designated[citation needed] as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB).

List of towns and villages in the Chiltern Hills edit

Strip parishes associated with the Chiltern Hills edit

The western edge of the Chiltern Hills is notable for ancient strip parishes, elongated parishes with villages in the flatter land below the escarpment, and woodland and summer pastures in the higher land.[2]

Economic use edit

The hills have been used for their natural resources for millennia. The chalk has been quarried for the manufacture of cement, and flint for local building material. Beechwoods supplied furniture makers with quality hardwood.[1] The area was once (and still is to a lesser degree) renowned for its chair-making industry,[1] centred on the towns of Chesham and High Wycombe (the nickname of Wycombe Wanderers Football Club is the Chairboys). Water was and remains a scarce resource in the Chiltern Hills. Historically it was drawn from the aquifer via ponds, deep wells, occasional springs or bournes and chalk streams and rivers. The River Chess directly supplies watercress beds. Today the chalk aquifer is exploited via a network of pumping stations to provide a public supply for domestic consumption, agriculture and business uses, both within and well-beyond the Chiltern Hills area. Over-exploitation has possibly led to the disappearance of some streams over long periods.[15]

In a region without building stone, local clay provided the raw materials for brick manufacture. Timber and flint were also used for construction.

Mediaeval strip parishes reflected the diversity of land from clay farmland, through wooded slopes to downland. Their boundaries were often drawn to include a section of each type of land, resulting in an irregular county boundary. These have tended to be smoothed out by successive reorganisations.

As people have come to appreciate the open country, the area has become a visitor destination and the National Trust has acquired land to preserve its character, for example at Ashridge, near Tring. In places, with the reduction of sheep grazing, action has been taken to maintain open downland by suppressing the natural growth of scrub and birch woodland. In the 1920s and 1930s, the Youth Hostels Association established several youth hostels for people visiting the hills.

The hills have been used as a location for telecommunication relay stations such as Stokenchurch BT Tower and that at Zouches Farm.

Protection edit

 
Vernacular architecture of the Chilterns is preserved at the Chiltern Open Air Museum

The Chiltern Hills is an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) and so enjoys special protection from major developments, which should not take place in such areas except in exceptional circumstances. This protection applies to major development proposals that raise issues of national significance.[16] In 2000 the government confirmed that the landscape qualities of AONBs are equivalent to those of National Parks, and that the protection given to both types of area by the land use planning system should also be equivalent.

Chilterns Conservation Board edit

The Chiltern Hills Conservation Board was established by Parliamentary Order in July 2004. It is an independent body comprising 27 members drawn from the relevant local authorities and from those living in local communities within the Chiltern AONB area.

The Board's purposes are set out in Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000: In summary these are:- First, to conserve and enhance the natural beauty of the AONB, and increase the understanding and enjoyment by the public of the special qualities of the AONB. Second, while taking account of the first purpose, to foster the economic and social wellbeing of local communities within the AONB. Third, to publish and promote the implementation of a management plan for the AONB.[17]

In contrast to National Parks, The Chiltern Hills – as other AONBs – do not possess their own planning authority. The Board has an advisory role on planning and development matters and seeks to influence the actions of local government by commenting upon planning applications.[18]

The local authorities (two County Councils, three Unitary Authorities and four District and Borough Councils) are expected to respect the area's status as a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.

Heritage edit

Examples of historical architecture in the Chiltern region are preserved at the Chiltern Open Air Museum near Chalfont St Giles. This open-air folk museum contains reconstructed buildings which might otherwise have been destroyed or demolished as a result of redevelopment or road construction.[19][20]

Chiltern Hundreds edit

The Chiltern Hills includes the Chiltern Hundreds. By established custom, Members of Parliament (MPs) in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom, who are prohibited from resigning their seats directly, may apply for the Stewardship of the Chiltern Hundreds as a device to enable their departure from the House.

List of hills edit

Hills in The Chiltern Hills more than 200 metres in elevation and with more than 30 metres of topographic prominence are listed from southwest to northeast.[21]

Hill Elevation (m) Prominence (m) OS grid reference
Bald Hill 257 125 SU728957
Widdenton Park Hill 203 35 SU817917
Lodge Hill 209 45 SP794000
Whiteleaf Hill 247 63 SP823034
Pulpit Hill 248 56 SP831050
Beacon Hill 230 33 SP835060
Coombe Hill 260 108 SP849066
Wendover Woods 267 180 SP890090
Aldbury Nowers 222 41 SP952136
Clipper Down 249 123 SP965151
Dunstable Downs 243 105 TL008194
Blow's Down 212 48 TL034214

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Chiltern Hills" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 6 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 163.
  2. ^ a b Hepple, Leslie; Doggett, Alison (1971). The Chilterns. England: Phillimore & Co Ltd. ISBN 0-85033-833-6.
  3. ^ a b c The Changing Landscape of the Chilterns 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Chilterns AoNB, Accessed 19 February 2012
  4. ^ Chiltern Society, The Chilterns 7 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine.
  5. ^ a b c Rawson, P.F. 2006. Cretaceous: sea levels peak as the North Atlantic opens. In: P.J. Brenchley and P.F. Rawson (Eds) The Geology of England and Wales, p.365-393. The Geological Society ISBN 978-1-86239-200-7
  6. ^ a b Anderson, R., P.H. Bridges, M.R. Leeder and B.W. Sellwood (Eds) 1979. A Dynamic Stratigraphy of the British Isles: A Study in Crustal Evolution. p. 241. George Allen and Unwin, London. ISBN 0-412-44510-7
  7. ^ Hepple, Leslie (1992). The Chilterns. Chichester, Sussex: Phillimore & Co., Ltd. p. 16. ISBN 085033-833-6.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 October 2011. Retrieved 24 June 2011.
  9. ^ B.S. Nau, C. R. Boon, and J. P. Knowles, Bedfordshire Wildlife, Castlemead, 1987, ISBN 0-948555-05-X, page 71.
  10. ^ DidYouKnow.pdf[permanent dead link] Chilterns AoNB, Accessed 19 February 2012
  11. ^ "Chiltern Tunnel". High Speed 2. Retrieved 4 February 2022.
  12. ^ Chilterns Conservation Board – statement objecting to HS2, Accessed 12 December 2012
  13. ^ Chilerns AoNB website – HS2, Accessed 20 February 2012
  14. ^ Ekwall (1940). The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-names (second ed.). Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 99. Ekwall cites the forms Cilternsætna ( Birch's Cartularium Saxonicum; 297); Cilternes efes ( Kemble's Codex diplomaticus aevi Saxonici; 715) and Ciltern (Anglo-Saxon Chronicle; text E)
  15. ^ Chess Valley Association, Accessed 4 September 2014
  16. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 November 2009. Retrieved 25 March 2010.
  17. ^ Chiltern Conservation Board – Our Role, Accessed 10 December 2012
  18. ^ "The Chilterns AONB – Planning & Development". www.chilternsaonb.org.
  19. ^ "Historic Buildings". coam.org.uk. Chiltern Open Air Museum. from the original on 28 January 2021. Retrieved 27 April 2022.
  20. ^ Matthews, Helen; Matthews, Neil (15 February 2019). Slow Travel: The Chilterns & the Thames Valley. Bradt Travel Guides. pp. 103–104. ISBN 978-1-78477-613-8. Retrieved 27 April 2022.
  21. ^ "Marilyn Regions". www.hill-bagging.co.uk. Retrieved 22 June 2020.

External links edit

  • Chilterns AONB
  • Chilterns Conservation Board
  • Chilterns Tourism Network
  • A Year in The Chiltern Hills
  • Chiltern Society

chiltern, hills, chalk, escarpment, northwest, london, covering, square, miles, across, oxfordshire, buckinghamshire, hertfordshire, bedfordshire, stretching, miles, from, goring, thames, southwest, hitchin, northeast, hills, miles, their, widest, near, nettle. The Chiltern Hills are a chalk escarpment in the UK 1 northwest of London covering 660 square miles 1 700 km2 across Oxfordshire Buckinghamshire Hertfordshire and Bedfordshire stretching 45 miles 72 km from Goring on Thames in the southwest to Hitchin in the northeast The hills are 12 miles 19 km at their widest Chiltern HillsNear Nettlebed OxfordshireHighest pointPeakHaddington HillElevation267 m 876 ft DimensionsLength74 km 46 mi Width18 km 11 mi Area1 700 km2 660 sq mi GeographyLocation of the Chiltern Hills AONB in EnglandLocationSoutheast of EnglandEast of EnglandCountryUnited KingdomCountiesBedfordshireBuckinghamshireHertfordshireOxfordshireRange coordinates51 40 N 0 55 W 51 667 N 0 917 W 51 667 0 917GeologyType of rockchalk downlandIn 1965 almost half of the Chiltern Hills was designated as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty AONB The northwest boundary is clearly defined by the escarpment The dip slope is by definition more gradual and merges with the landscape to the southeast 2 The southwest endpoint is the River Thames The hills decline slowly in prominence in northeast Bedfordshire 3 4 Contents 1 Geology 2 Physical characteristics 2 1 Topography 2 2 Landscape and land use 2 3 Rivers 2 4 Transport 3 History 4 List of towns and villages in the Chiltern Hills 4 1 Strip parishes associated with the Chiltern Hills 5 Economic use 6 Protection 6 1 Chilterns Conservation Board 6 2 Heritage 7 Chiltern Hundreds 8 List of hills 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksGeology edit nbsp Chalk visible in ploughed soil at the foot of the Chiltern Hill escarpment near Shirburn on the Buckinghamshire Oxfordshire borderThe chalk escarpment of the Chiltern Hills overlooks the Vale of Aylesbury and roughly coincides with the southernmost extent of the ice sheet during the Anglian glacial maximum citation needed The Chiltern Hills are part of a system of chalk downlands throughout eastern and southern England formed between 65 and 95 million years ago 3 comprising rocks of the Chalk Group this also includes Salisbury Plain Cranborne Chase the Isle of Wight and the South Downs in the south In the north the chalk formations continue northeastwards across Hertfordshire Norfolk and the Lincolnshire Wolds finally ending as the Yorkshire Wolds in a prominent escarpment south of the Vale of Pickering The beds of the Chalk Group were deposited over the buried northwestern margin of the Anglo Brabant Massif during the Late Cretaceous 5 During this time sources for siliciclastic sediment had been eliminated due to the exceptionally high sea level 6 The formation is thinner through the Chiltern Hills than the chalk strata to the north and south and deposition was tectonically controlled with the Lilley Bottom structure playing a significant role at times 5 The Chalk Group like the underlying Gault Clay and Upper Greensand is diachronous 6 During the late stages of the Alpine Orogeny as the African Plate collided with Eurasian Plate Mesozoic extensional structures such as the Weald Basin of southern England underwent structural inversion 5 This phase of deformation tilted the chalk strata to the southeast in the area of the Chiltern Hills The gently dipping beds of rock were eroded forming an escarpment The chalk strata are frequently interspersed with layers of flint nodules which apparently replaced chalk and infilled pore spaces early in the diagenetic history Flint has been mined for millennia from the Chiltern Hills 7 They were first extracted for fabrication into flint axes in the Neolithic period then for knapping into flintlocks Nodules are to be seen everywhere in the older houses as a construction material for walls Physical characteristics editTopography edit nbsp Viewed from The Ridgeway eastern trailhead on Ivinghoe BeaconThe highest point is at 267 m 876 ft above sea level at Haddington Hill near Wendover in Buckinghamshire a stone monument marks the summit The nearby Ivinghoe Beacon is a more prominent hill although its altitude is only 249 m 817 ft 8 It is the starting point of the Icknield Way Path and the Ridgeway long distance path which follows the line of the Chiltern Hill for many miles to the west where they merge with the Wiltshire downs and southern Cotswolds To the east of Ivinghoe Beacon is Dunstable Downs a steep section of the Chiltern scarp Near Wendover is Coombe Hill 260 m 852 ft above sea level The more gently sloping country the dip slope to the southeast of the Chiltern scarp is also generally referred to as part of the Chiltern Hills it contains much beech woodland 1 and many villages Further information Ipsden Heath Landscape and land use edit Enclosed fields account for almost 66 of the Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty AONB area The next most important and archetypal landscape form is woodland covering 21 of the Chiltern Hills which is thus one of the most heavily wooded areas in England Built up areas settlements and industry make up over 5 of the land area parks and gardens nearly 4 open land commons heaths and downland is 2 and the remaining 2 includes a variety of uses including communications military open land recreation utilities and water 3 Rivers edit The Chiltern Hills are almost entirely located within the River Thames drainage basin and also drain towards several major Thames tributaries most notably the Lea which rises in the eastern Chiltern Hills the Colne to the south and the Thame to the north and west Other rivers arising near the Chiltern Hills include the Mimram the Ver the Gade the Bulbourne the Chess the Misbourne and the Wye These are classified as chalk streams although the Lea is degraded by water from road drains and sewage treatment works 9 The Thames flows through a gap between the Berkshire Downs and the Chiltern Hills Portions around Leighton Buzzard and Hitchin are drained by the Ouzel the Flit and the Hiz all of which ultimately flow into the River Great Ouse the last two via the Ivel Transport edit nbsp Stokenchurch Gap a cutting built to carry the M40 motorway through a section of the Chiltern HillsSeveral transport routes pass through the Chiltern Hills in natural or human made corridors There are also over 2 000 km 1 200 mi of public footpaths in the Chiltern Hills including long distance trackways such as the Icknield Way and The Ridgeway 10 The M40 motorway passes through the Chiltern Hills in Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire sections with a deep cutting through the Stokenchurch Gap The M1 motorway crosses the Bedfordshire section near Luton Other major roads include the A41 and the A413 The Chiltern Main Line Railway via High Wycombe and Princes Risborough the London to Aylesbury Line via Amersham the West Coast Main Line via Berkhamsted and the Midland Main Line all run through the Chiltern Hills The Great Western Main Line and its branches such as the Henley and Marlow branch lines link the southern side of the Chiltern Hills with London Paddington The Chinnor and Princes Risborough Railway is a preserved line High Speed 2 HS2 will pass underneath the Chiltern Hills in the Chiltern tunnel This tunnel the longest under construction on the HS2 route will be 16 km 9 9 miles in length 11 The Conservation Board has made clear it was opposed to the routing of HS2 through the Chiltern Hills AONB 12 13 Bus services are provided by Arriva Shires amp Essex and Carousel Buses Air corridors from Luton Airport pass over the Chiltern Hills Apart from the River Thames there are no navigable rivers The Grand Union Canal passes through the Chiltern Hills between Berkhamsted and Marsworth following the course of the Gade and Bulbourne Also after crossing a watershed the Ouzel is partly in the Chiltern Hills History edit nbsp Bottle kiln Nettlebed probably from the late 17th century nbsp Watlington Town HallDuring the Iron Age the Chiltern ridge provided a relatively safe and easily navigable route across southern Britain The toponym Chiltern is believed to be Brittonic in origin According to Eilert Ekwall Chiltern is possibly related to the broader ethnic name Celt Celtae in early Celtic languages the root celto high and suffix erno could provide the origin of Chiltern 14 Before the 18th century the population lived dispersed across the largely rural landscape of the Chiltern Hills in remote villages hamlets farmsteads and market towns along the main turnpike routes which coursed through the navigable valleys The development of canals in the 18th century and railways in the 19th century encouraged settlement and the growth of High Wycombe Tring and Luton Significant housing and industrial development took place in the first half of the 20th century and continued throughout the 20th century In 1965 almost half of the Chiltern Hills was designated citation needed as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty AONB List of towns and villages in the Chiltern Hills editAldbury Amersham Apsley Ashridge Aston Clinton Barton le Clay Bellingdon Berkhamsted Bledlow Ridge Bovingdon Bradenham Breachwood Green Buckland Common Caddington Chalfont St Giles Chalfont St Peter Chartridge Checkendon Cheddington Chesham Chiltern Green Chinnor Cholesbury Christmas Common Coleshill Dagnall Downley Dunsmore Dunstable Edlesborough Ellesborough Fawley Fingest Flackwell Heath Frieth Gerrards Cross Goring On Thames Great Hampden Great Kingshill Great Missenden Great Offley Halton Hambleden Harlington Hawridge Hazlemere Hemel Hempstead Henley on Thames Hexton High Wycombe Hitchin Holmer Green Hughenden Hyde Heath Ibstone Ivinghoe Jordans Kensworth Lacey Green Lane End Latimer Ley Hill Lilley Little Chalfont Little Gaddesden Little Kingshill Little Missenden Luton Markyate Marlow Marlow Bottom Medmenham Naphill Nettlebed Nuffield Penn Pishill Pitstone Prestwood Princes Risborough Radnage Redbourn Seer Green Sharpenhoe Shiplake Skirmett Southend South Heath Speen St Leonards Stokenchurch Stonor Streatley Beds Studham Thame The Lee Tring Turville Tylers Green Walter s Ash Watlington Wendover West Wycombe Whipsnade Whitwell Wigginton Winchmore Hill WoodcoteStrip parishes associated with the Chiltern Hills edit The western edge of the Chiltern Hills is notable for ancient strip parishes elongated parishes with villages in the flatter land below the escarpment and woodland and summer pastures in the higher land 2 Bedfordshire Eaton Bray Toddington Totternhoe Buckinghamshire Aston Clinton Aylesbury Bledlow Buckland Drayton Beauchamp Great Kimble Horsenden The Lee Marsworth Monks Risborough Pitstone Princes Risborough Saunderton Stoke Mandeville Weston Turville Hertfordshire Tring Wigginton Oxfordshire Aston Rowant Checkendon Chinnor Ipsden Lewknor Mongewell Newnham Murren Nuffield Pyrton Shirburn South Stoke WatlingtonEconomic use editThe hills have been used for their natural resources for millennia The chalk has been quarried for the manufacture of cement and flint for local building material Beechwoods supplied furniture makers with quality hardwood 1 The area was once and still is to a lesser degree renowned for its chair making industry 1 centred on the towns of Chesham and High Wycombe the nickname of Wycombe Wanderers Football Club is the Chairboys Water was and remains a scarce resource in the Chiltern Hills Historically it was drawn from the aquifer via ponds deep wells occasional springs or bournes and chalk streams and rivers The River Chess directly supplies watercress beds Today the chalk aquifer is exploited via a network of pumping stations to provide a public supply for domestic consumption agriculture and business uses both within and well beyond the Chiltern Hills area Over exploitation has possibly led to the disappearance of some streams over long periods 15 In a region without building stone local clay provided the raw materials for brick manufacture Timber and flint were also used for construction Mediaeval strip parishes reflected the diversity of land from clay farmland through wooded slopes to downland Their boundaries were often drawn to include a section of each type of land resulting in an irregular county boundary These have tended to be smoothed out by successive reorganisations As people have come to appreciate the open country the area has become a visitor destination and the National Trust has acquired land to preserve its character for example at Ashridge near Tring In places with the reduction of sheep grazing action has been taken to maintain open downland by suppressing the natural growth of scrub and birch woodland In the 1920s and 1930s the Youth Hostels Association established several youth hostels for people visiting the hills The hills have been used as a location for telecommunication relay stations such as Stokenchurch BT Tower and that at Zouches Farm Protection edit nbsp Vernacular architecture of the Chilterns is preserved at the Chiltern Open Air MuseumThe Chiltern Hills is an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty AONB and so enjoys special protection from major developments which should not take place in such areas except in exceptional circumstances This protection applies to major development proposals that raise issues of national significance 16 In 2000 the government confirmed that the landscape qualities of AONBs are equivalent to those of National Parks and that the protection given to both types of area by the land use planning system should also be equivalent Chilterns Conservation Board edit The Chiltern Hills Conservation Board was established by Parliamentary Order in July 2004 It is an independent body comprising 27 members drawn from the relevant local authorities and from those living in local communities within the Chiltern AONB area The Board s purposes are set out in Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000 In summary these are First to conserve and enhance the natural beauty of the AONB and increase the understanding and enjoyment by the public of the special qualities of the AONB Second while taking account of the first purpose to foster the economic and social wellbeing of local communities within the AONB Third to publish and promote the implementation of a management plan for the AONB 17 In contrast to National Parks The Chiltern Hills as other AONBs do not possess their own planning authority The Board has an advisory role on planning and development matters and seeks to influence the actions of local government by commenting upon planning applications 18 The local authorities two County Councils three Unitary Authorities and four District and Borough Councils are expected to respect the area s status as a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty Heritage edit Examples of historical architecture in the Chiltern region are preserved at the Chiltern Open Air Museum near Chalfont St Giles This open air folk museum contains reconstructed buildings which might otherwise have been destroyed or demolished as a result of redevelopment or road construction 19 20 Chiltern Hundreds editMain article Resignation from the British House of Commons The Chiltern Hills includes the Chiltern Hundreds By established custom Members of Parliament MPs in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom who are prohibited from resigning their seats directly may apply for the Stewardship of the Chiltern Hundreds as a device to enable their departure from the House List of hills editHills in The Chiltern Hills more than 200 metres in elevation and with more than 30 metres of topographic prominence are listed from southwest to northeast 21 Hill Elevation m Prominence m OS grid referenceBald Hill 257 125 SU728957Widdenton Park Hill 203 35 SU817917Lodge Hill 209 45 SP794000Whiteleaf Hill 247 63 SP823034Pulpit Hill 248 56 SP831050Beacon Hill 230 33 SP835060Coombe Hill 260 108 SP849066Wendover Woods 267 180 SP890090Aldbury Nowers 222 41 SP952136Clipper Down 249 123 SP965151Dunstable Downs 243 105 TL008194Blow s Down 212 48 TL034214See also editZouches FarmReferences edit a b c d Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Chiltern Hills Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 6 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 163 a b Hepple Leslie Doggett Alison 1971 The Chilterns England Phillimore amp Co Ltd ISBN 0 85033 833 6 a b c The Changing Landscape of the Chilterns Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Chilterns AoNB Accessed 19 February 2012 Chiltern Society The Chilterns Archived 7 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine a b c Rawson P F 2006 Cretaceous sea levels peak as the North Atlantic opens In P J Brenchley and P F Rawson Eds The Geology of England and Wales p 365 393 The Geological Society ISBN 978 1 86239 200 7 a b Anderson R P H Bridges M R Leeder and B W Sellwood Eds 1979 A Dynamic Stratigraphy of the British Isles A Study in Crustal Evolution p 241 George Allen and Unwin London ISBN 0 412 44510 7 Hepple Leslie 1992 The Chilterns Chichester Sussex Phillimore amp Co Ltd p 16 ISBN 085033 833 6 Natural England Archived from the original on 8 October 2011 Retrieved 24 June 2011 B S Nau C R Boon and J P Knowles Bedfordshire Wildlife Castlemead 1987 ISBN 0 948555 05 X page 71 DidYouKnow pdf permanent dead link Chilterns AoNB Accessed 19 February 2012 Chiltern Tunnel High Speed 2 Retrieved 4 February 2022 Chilterns Conservation Board statement objecting to HS2 Accessed 12 December 2012 Chilerns AoNB website HS2 Accessed 20 February 2012 Ekwall 1940 The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place names second ed Oxford Clarendon Press p 99 Ekwall cites the forms Cilternsaetna Birch s Cartularium Saxonicum 297 Cilternes efes Kemble s Codex diplomaticus aevi Saxonici 715 and Ciltern Anglo Saxon Chronicle text E Chess Valley Association Accessed 4 September 2014 Planning Policy Statement 7 Sustainable Development in Rural Areas PDF Archived from the original PDF on 23 November 2009 Retrieved 25 March 2010 Chiltern Conservation Board Our Role Accessed 10 December 2012 The Chilterns AONB Planning amp Development www chilternsaonb org Historic Buildings coam org uk Chiltern Open Air Museum Archived from the original on 28 January 2021 Retrieved 27 April 2022 Matthews Helen Matthews Neil 15 February 2019 Slow Travel The Chilterns amp the Thames Valley Bradt Travel Guides pp 103 104 ISBN 978 1 78477 613 8 Retrieved 27 April 2022 Marilyn Regions www hill bagging co uk Retrieved 22 June 2020 External links editChilterns AONB Chilterns Conservation Board Chilterns Tourism Network A Year in The Chiltern Hills Chiltern Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chiltern Hills amp oldid 1185685044, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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