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Victoria County History

The Victoria History of the Counties of England, commonly known as the Victoria County History or the VCH, is an English history project which began in 1899 with the aim of creating an encyclopaedic history of each of the historic counties of England, and was dedicated to Queen Victoria. In 2012 the project was rededicated to Queen Elizabeth II in celebration of her Diamond Jubilee year.[1]: 7  Since 1933 the project has been coordinated by the Institute of Historical Research in the University of London.

Victoria History of the Counties of England
The VCH logo

CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
DisciplineHistory
PublisherInstitute of Historical Research
Media typePrint
Websitewww.history.ac.uk/research/victoria-county-history

History edit

The history of the VCH falls into three main phases, defined by different funding regimes: an early phase, 1899–1914, when the project was conceived as a commercial enterprise, and progress was rapid; a second more desultory phase, 1914–1947, when relatively little progress was made; and the third phase beginning in 1947, when, under the auspices of the Institute of Historical Research, a high academic standard was set, and progress has been slow but reasonably steady.[2]: 54–6 

These phases have also been characterised by changing attitudes towards the proper scope of English local history. The early volumes were planned on the model of traditional English county histories, with a strong emphasis on manorial descents, the advowsons of parish churches, and the local landed gentry: a prospectus of c. 1904 stated that "there is no Englishman to whom [the VCH] does not in some one or other of its features make a direct appeal".[2]: 55  More recent volumes – especially those published since the 1950s – have been more wide-ranging in their approach, and have included systematic coverage of social and economic history, industrial history, population history, educational history, landscape history, religious nonconformity, and so on; individual parish histories have consequently grown considerably in length and complexity.

From 1902 the joint general editors were H. Arthur Doubleday and William Page. Doubleday resigned (in acrimonious circumstances) in 1904,[3]: 148–52  leaving Page as sole general editor until his death in 1934. In 1932 Page bought the rights to the ailing project for a nominal sum, donating it to the Institute of Historical Research the following year.[4] Page was succeeded as general editor by L. F. Salzman, who remained in post until 1949.[4] The early volumes depended heavily on the efforts of a large number of young research workers, mostly female, fresh from degree courses at Oxford, Cambridge, London or the Scottish universities, for whom other employment opportunities were limited: the VCH of this period has been described as "a history for gentlemen largely researched by ladies".[2]: 54 

From 1909 until 1931 Frederick Smith, later 2nd Viscount Hambleden, was the VCH's major sponsor.[4] In February 2005 the Heritage Lottery Fund awarded the VCH £3,374,000 to fund the England's Past for Everyone project, which ran from September that year until February 2010.[5]

Progress edit

 
VCH progress by county

The first VCH volume was published in 1901, and publication continued slowly throughout the 20th century, although in some counties it has come to a halt, especially during the First World War[4] and again in the 1970s. Some inactive counties have recently been reactivated.

There are now more than 230 VCH volumes, with around three new volumes published per year. Each is published with a red cover, and they are therefore sometimes known as "the big red books". When the Institute of Historical Research published a short history of the project to mark the 75th anniversary of taking it over, it was titled The Little Big Red Book.[6] A special edition Jubilee book was published in 2012, A Diamond Jubilee Celebration 1899–2012.[1]

A map showing the publication status appears on the VCH website.[7]

Structure and content of the county histories edit

From its inception, responsibility for writing the volumes was delegated to local editors for each individual county. The county editors traditionally worked under the direction of a general editor, following a uniform format and style.

In general, the histories begin with one or more volumes of general studies of the county as a whole, including major themes, such as religious history, agriculture, industries, population (with summary tables of decennial census totals 1801–1901), and an introduction to and translation of the relevant section of Domesday Book.[8] These volumes are followed by others consisting of detailed historical surveys of each Hundred, Wapentake (discussed in separate riding volumes) and ward, parish by parish. At first, ancient ecclesiastical parishes formed the unit of investigation, but since the mid-1950s the VCH parish is the civil parish, the modern successor of the ancient parishes or of townships within them. Large towns are dealt with as a whole, including, since the 1960s, built-up areas of adjoining, formerly rural parishes.[8]: 18–19 

Under the original plan, each county, in addition to its general and topographical volumes, was to have a genealogical volume containing the pedigrees of county families. Genealogical volumes were published in a large folio format for Northamptonshire (1906) and Hertfordshire (1907), but the research costs were found to be excessive, and this side of the project was discontinued.[3]: 156–57 

Completed county histories edit

Some of the county histories have been completed, as follows:

County Number of volumes Year completed
Bedfordshire 3 + index 1914
Berkshire 4 + index 1927
Buckinghamshire 4 + index 1928
Cambridgeshire 10 + index 2002
Hampshire 5 + index 1914
Hertfordshire 4 + index 1923
Huntingdonshire 3 + index 1938
Lancashire 8 1914
Rutland 2 + index 1936
Surrey 4 + index 1914
Warwickshire 8 + index 1969
Worcestershire 4 + index 1926
Yorkshire (general volumes) 3 + index 1925
Yorkshire (North Riding) 2 + index 1925

Counties in progress edit

For each uncompleted county history on which work is continuing (i.e.: "active" in VCH terminology), progress is as follows:

 
From a VCH frontispiece, 1911
County Number of volumes published Year of most recent volume
Cornwall 1 in two parts 1925
County Durham 5 2015
Cumberland 2 1968
Derbyshire 3 2013
Essex 12 2022
Gloucestershire 11 2016
Herefordshire 1 1975
Kent 3 1974
Leicestershire 5 1988
Middlesex 13 2009
Northamptonshire 7 2013
Nottinghamshire 2 1907
Oxfordshire 20 2022
Shropshire 11 2014
Somerset 11 2015
Staffordshire 15 2021
Sussex 11 2009
Westmorland none
Wiltshire 18 2011
Yorkshire (East Riding) 10 2021
Yorkshire (West Riding) none

Dormant counties edit

 
Logo of VCH publisher, Constable & Co. Ltd

Several volumes are not currently being worked on.

County Number of volumes published Year of most recent volume
Cheshire 6 2005
Devon 1 1906
Dorset 2 1968
Lincoln 1 1906
London 1 1974
Norfolk 2 1975
Suffolk 2 1975
Yorkshire (general volumes and city of York) 4 1974

Counties with no published volumes edit

  • Northumberland produced its own, non-VCH, history in 15 volumes, published by the Northumberland County History Committee, completed in 1940.
  • Monmouthshire, sometimes regarded between the 16th and 20th centuries as an English county, has never been treated as such by the VCH, and has never been proposed for inclusion within the project. A non-VCH county history of Gwent/Monmouthshire was published by the University of Wales Press in five volumes between 2004 and 2013.[9][10]
  • Westmorland has not yet produced a VCH volume, but the area is included within the VCH Cumbria project.

General editors edit

Notable county editors edit

Notable contributors edit

Online availability edit

Much of the content of the older VCH volumes is now accessible via the British History Online digital library, digitised by double rekeying. Priority has been given to the topographical volumes containing histories of individual parishes. The more general introductory volumes are excluded for the time being, with the exception of those sections covering the religious houses of each county.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Beckett, John; Bristow, Matthew; Williamson, Elizabeth (2013). The Victoria County History 1899-2012: a Diamond Jubilee celebration (2nd ed.). London: University of London, Institute of Historical Research. ISBN 9781905165919.
  2. ^ a b c Lewis, Christopher (1989). "The Victoria County History". Particular Places: an introduction to English local history. London: British Library. ISBN 0712301755.
  3. ^ a b Powell, W. Raymond (2001). John Horace Round: Historian and Gentleman of Essex. Chelmsford: Essex Record Office. ISBN 1-898529-19-1.
  4. ^ a b c d Lewis, Chris (2008). "William Page (1861–1934), general editor of the Victoria County History 1902–34". Making History.
  5. ^ "England's Past for Everyone". Victoria County History. Retrieved 30 March 2014.
  6. ^ "75 years at the IHR". Victoria County History. Retrieved 24 May 2009.
  7. ^ "VCH Counties". Victoria County History. Retrieved 24 March 2013.
  8. ^ a b Tiller, Kate (1992). English local history: an introduction. Stroud: Sutton Publishing. ISBN 0-86299-958-8.
  9. ^ "The Gwent County History, Volume 1: Gwent in Prehistory and Early History". University of Wales Press. Retrieved 12 July 2021.
  10. ^ "The Gwent County History, Volume 5: The Twentieth Century". University of Wales Press. Retrieved 12 July 2021.
  11. ^ "Dr Christopher Currie, MA, D Phil (Oxon), FRHistS, FSA". IHR. Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  12. ^ a b c "Contributors to the VCH". IHR. Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  13. ^ "Professor Richard Hoyle appointed as VCH Director & General Editor". IHR. 22 May 2014. Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  14. ^ "Medieval specialist Catherine Clarke to lead new IHR research centre and the VCH | Victoria County History". www.victoriacountyhistory.ac.uk. Retrieved 8 July 2019.
  15. ^ "Mary Bateson". beyond-notability.wikibase.cloud. Retrieved 15 December 2022.
  16. ^ "Dodds, Madeleine Hope (1885–1972), historian". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/60805. Retrieved 11 October 2020. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  17. ^ "Maud Sellers". beyond-notability.wikibase.cloud. Retrieved 15 December 2022.
  18. ^ "Margerie Venables Taylor". beyond-notability.wikibase.cloud. Retrieved 15 December 2022.

Further reading edit

  • Baker, Timothy (1993). "The Victoria County History of Middlesex". The Local Historian. 23: 155–62.
  • Beckett, J. V. (2008). "Local history, family history and the Victoria County History: new directions for the twenty-first century". Historical Research. 81 (212): 350–65. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2281.2007.00426.x.
  • Beckett, J. V. (2009). "The Thoroton Society and the Victoria County History". Transactions of the Thoroton Society of Nottinghamshire. 113: 119–36.
  • Beckett, J. V. (2009). "Libraries and the Victoria County History". Library & Information History. 25 (4): 217–26. doi:10.1179/175834809x12489648790016. S2CID 162269824.
  • Beckett, J. V. (2011). "Writing Hampshire's history: the Victoria County History, 1899–1914". Proceedings of the Hampshire Field Club & Archaeological Society. 66: 201–214.
  • Beckett, J. V. (2011). "W. G. Hoskins, the Victoria County History, and the study of English local history". Midland History. 36: 115–127. doi:10.1179/004772911x12956221816321. S2CID 159827576.
  • Beckett, J. V. (2011). "W. G. Hoskins and the Victoria County History in Leicestershire". Transactions of the Leicestershire Archaeological and Historical Society. 85: 165–191.
  • Beckett, J. V. (2011). "Topography and landscape history: the role of the Victoria County History". Landscape History. 32 (2): 57–65. doi:10.1080/01433768.2011.10594659. S2CID 162189941.
  • Beckett, J. V. (2011). "The Victoria County History in Devon, 1899–1910". Devonshire Association Report and Transactions. 143: 283–310.
  • Beckett, J. V. (2011). "The Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society and the Victoria County History". Transactions of the Cumberland & Westmorland Antiquarian & Archaeological Society. 3rd ser. 11: 207–225.
  • Beckett, J. V. (2011). "Canon Thomas Taylor of St Just and the Victoria County History in Cornwall, 1899–1938". Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall: 31–44.
  • Beckett, J. V. (2014). "The Victoria County History in Yorkshire: the past, the present and the future". Northern History. 51 (2): 330–343. doi:10.1179/0078172X14Z.00000000068. S2CID 161292986.
  • Beckett, J. V. (2014). "The Victoria County History in the Midlands". Midland History. 39 (1): 133–143. doi:10.1179/0047729X14Z.00000000037. S2CID 161279919.
  • Beckett, J. V.; Bristow, Matthew; Williamson, Elizabeth (2013). The Victoria County History, 1899–2012: a diamond jubilee celebration. London: Victoria County History. ISBN 9781905165735.
  • Beckett, J. V.; Watkins, Charles (2011). "Natural history and local history in late Victorian and Edwardian England: the contribution of the Victoria County History". Rural History. 22: 59–87. doi:10.1017/s0956793310000142. S2CID 162280058.
  • Cooper, Janet (1992). "The Victoria County History". In Neale, Kenneth (ed.). Essex Heritage: essays presented to Sir William Addison as a tribute to his life and work for Essex history and literature. Oxford: Leopard's Head. pp. 15–30.
  • Currie, C. R. J. (1999). "Victoria County History". History Today. 49 (12): 28–30.
  • Dunning, R. W. (2006). "The Victoria County History of Cornwall: an uncertain start". Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall: 14–21.
  • Elrington, Christopher (1992). "The Victoria County History". The Local Historian. 22: 128–37.
  • Hackett, Mel; Whitston, Kerry (2008). The Little Big Red Book: a celebration of 75 years of the Victoria County History at the Institute of Historical Research. Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer. ISBN 978-1-904356-14-1.
  • Lilley, Keith D. (2012). "Review Article: The Victoria County History and the landscape of towns: a review and critique". 13 (1): 70–74. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Pugh, R. B. (1971). "The Victoria County History". British Studies Monitor. 2: 15–23.
  • Williamson, Elizabeth (2001). "Heritage and history: the historic built environment and the Victoria County History". The Historian. 72: 44–47.

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • The Victoria County History at Boydell & Brewer
  • Professor Christopher Elrington – Daily Telegraph obituary

victoria, county, history, victoria, history, counties, england, commonly, known, english, history, project, which, began, 1899, with, creating, encyclopaedic, history, each, historic, counties, england, dedicated, queen, victoria, 2012, project, rededicated, . The Victoria History of the Counties of England commonly known as the Victoria County History or the VCH is an English history project which began in 1899 with the aim of creating an encyclopaedic history of each of the historic counties of England and was dedicated to Queen Victoria In 2012 the project was rededicated to Queen Elizabeth II in celebration of her Diamond Jubilee year 1 7 Since 1933 the project has been coordinated by the Institute of Historical Research in the University of London Victoria History of the Counties of EnglandThe VCH logoCountryUnited KingdomLanguageEnglishDisciplineHistoryPublisherInstitute of Historical ResearchMedia typePrintWebsitewww wbr history wbr ac wbr uk wbr research wbr victoria county history Contents 1 History 2 Progress 3 Structure and content of the county histories 4 Completed county histories 5 Counties in progress 6 Dormant counties 7 Counties with no published volumes 8 General editors 9 Notable county editors 10 Notable contributors 11 Online availability 12 See also 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksHistory editThe history of the VCH falls into three main phases defined by different funding regimes an early phase 1899 1914 when the project was conceived as a commercial enterprise and progress was rapid a second more desultory phase 1914 1947 when relatively little progress was made and the third phase beginning in 1947 when under the auspices of the Institute of Historical Research a high academic standard was set and progress has been slow but reasonably steady 2 54 6 These phases have also been characterised by changing attitudes towards the proper scope of English local history The early volumes were planned on the model of traditional English county histories with a strong emphasis on manorial descents the advowsons of parish churches and the local landed gentry a prospectus of c 1904 stated that there is no Englishman to whom the VCH does not in some one or other of its features make a direct appeal 2 55 More recent volumes especially those published since the 1950s have been more wide ranging in their approach and have included systematic coverage of social and economic history industrial history population history educational history landscape history religious nonconformity and so on individual parish histories have consequently grown considerably in length and complexity From 1902 the joint general editors were H Arthur Doubleday and William Page Doubleday resigned in acrimonious circumstances in 1904 3 148 52 leaving Page as sole general editor until his death in 1934 In 1932 Page bought the rights to the ailing project for a nominal sum donating it to the Institute of Historical Research the following year 4 Page was succeeded as general editor by L F Salzman who remained in post until 1949 4 The early volumes depended heavily on the efforts of a large number of young research workers mostly female fresh from degree courses at Oxford Cambridge London or the Scottish universities for whom other employment opportunities were limited the VCH of this period has been described as a history for gentlemen largely researched by ladies 2 54 From 1909 until 1931 Frederick Smith later 2nd Viscount Hambleden was the VCH s major sponsor 4 In February 2005 the Heritage Lottery Fund awarded the VCH 3 374 000 to fund the England s Past for Everyone project which ran from September that year until February 2010 5 Progress edit nbsp VCH progress by countyThe first VCH volume was published in 1901 and publication continued slowly throughout the 20th century although in some counties it has come to a halt especially during the First World War 4 and again in the 1970s Some inactive counties have recently been reactivated There are now more than 230 VCH volumes with around three new volumes published per year Each is published with a red cover and they are therefore sometimes known as the big red books When the Institute of Historical Research published a short history of the project to mark the 75th anniversary of taking it over it was titled The Little Big Red Book 6 A special edition Jubilee book was published in 2012 A Diamond Jubilee Celebration 1899 2012 1 A map showing the publication status appears on the VCH website 7 Structure and content of the county histories editFrom its inception responsibility for writing the volumes was delegated to local editors for each individual county The county editors traditionally worked under the direction of a general editor following a uniform format and style In general the histories begin with one or more volumes of general studies of the county as a whole including major themes such as religious history agriculture industries population with summary tables of decennial census totals 1801 1901 and an introduction to and translation of the relevant section of Domesday Book 8 These volumes are followed by others consisting of detailed historical surveys of each Hundred Wapentake discussed in separate riding volumes and ward parish by parish At first ancient ecclesiastical parishes formed the unit of investigation but since the mid 1950s the VCH parish is the civil parish the modern successor of the ancient parishes or of townships within them Large towns are dealt with as a whole including since the 1960s built up areas of adjoining formerly rural parishes 8 18 19 Under the original plan each county in addition to its general and topographical volumes was to have a genealogical volume containing the pedigrees of county families Genealogical volumes were published in a large folio format for Northamptonshire 1906 and Hertfordshire 1907 but the research costs were found to be excessive and this side of the project was discontinued 3 156 57 Completed county histories editSome of the county histories have been completed as follows County Number of volumes Year completedBedfordshire 3 index 1914Berkshire 4 index 1927Buckinghamshire 4 index 1928Cambridgeshire 10 index 2002Hampshire 5 index 1914Hertfordshire 4 index 1923Huntingdonshire 3 index 1938Lancashire 8 1914Rutland 2 index 1936Surrey 4 index 1914Warwickshire 8 index 1969Worcestershire 4 index 1926Yorkshire general volumes 3 index 1925Yorkshire North Riding 2 index 1925Counties in progress editFor each uncompleted county history on which work is continuing i e active in VCH terminology progress is as follows nbsp From a VCH frontispiece 1911County Number of volumes published Year of most recent volumeCornwall 1 in two parts 1925County Durham 5 2015Cumberland 2 1968Derbyshire 3 2013Essex 12 2022Gloucestershire 11 2016Herefordshire 1 1975Kent 3 1974Leicestershire 5 1988Middlesex 13 2009Northamptonshire 7 2013Nottinghamshire 2 1907Oxfordshire 20 2022Shropshire 11 2014Somerset 11 2015Staffordshire 15 2021Sussex 11 2009Westmorland noneWiltshire 18 2011Yorkshire East Riding 10 2021Yorkshire West Riding noneDormant counties edit nbsp Logo of VCH publisher Constable amp Co LtdSeveral volumes are not currently being worked on County Number of volumes published Year of most recent volumeCheshire 6 2005Devon 1 1906Dorset 2 1968Lincoln 1 1906London 1 1974Norfolk 2 1975Suffolk 2 1975Yorkshire general volumes and city of York 4 1974Counties with no published volumes editNorthumberland produced its own non VCH history in 15 volumes published by the Northumberland County History Committee completed in 1940 Monmouthshire sometimes regarded between the 16th and 20th centuries as an English county has never been treated as such by the VCH and has never been proposed for inclusion within the project A non VCH county history of Gwent Monmouthshire was published by the University of Wales Press in five volumes between 2004 and 2013 9 10 Westmorland has not yet produced a VCH volume but the area is included within the VCH Cumbria project General editors editWilliam Page General Editor 1904 34 Louis Francis Salzman General Editor 1934 49 Ralph Pugh General Editor 1949 77 Christopher Elrington General Editor 1977 94 Christopher Currie General Editor 1994 2000 11 Anthony Fletcher General Editor Director 2000 2005 12 John Beckett General Editor Director 2005 2010 12 Elizabeth Williamson Executive Editor 2010 2014 12 Richard Hoyle General Editor Director 2014 2016 13 Catherine Clarke Director 2019 present 14 Notable county editors editWilliam Page Somerset also general editor David Crouch Yorkshire East Riding Peter Ditchfield Berkshire Mary Lobel Oxfordshire Susan Reynolds Middlesex J Horace Round Essex John William Willis Bund Worcestershire Oswald Barron general editor of the genealogical volumes for Northamptonshire and Hertfordshire Notable contributors editMary Bateson 15 Madeleine Hope Dodds contributed to Durham 16 Charles Reed Peers Architectural Editor 1903 10 Maud Sellars contributed to Yorkshire Durham 17 Ethel Stokes contributed to Essex Margerie Venables Taylor 18 Online availability editMuch of the content of the older VCH volumes is now accessible via the British History Online digital library digitised by double rekeying Priority has been given to the topographical volumes containing histories of individual parishes The more general introductory volumes are excluded for the time being with the exception of those sections covering the religious houses of each county See also editGloucestershire Victoria County History Somerset Victoria County History Wiltshire Victoria County History Cambridge County Geographies English county histories Historiography of the United KingdomReferences edit a b Beckett John Bristow Matthew Williamson Elizabeth 2013 The Victoria County History 1899 2012 a Diamond Jubilee celebration 2nd ed London University of London Institute of Historical Research ISBN 9781905165919 a b c Lewis Christopher 1989 The Victoria County History Particular Places an introduction to English local history London British Library ISBN 0712301755 a b Powell W Raymond 2001 John Horace Round Historian and Gentleman of Essex Chelmsford Essex Record Office ISBN 1 898529 19 1 a b c d Lewis Chris 2008 William Page 1861 1934 general editor of the Victoria County History 1902 34 Making History England s Past for Everyone Victoria County History Retrieved 30 March 2014 75 years at the IHR Victoria County History Retrieved 24 May 2009 VCH Counties Victoria County History Retrieved 24 March 2013 a b Tiller Kate 1992 English local history an introduction Stroud Sutton Publishing ISBN 0 86299 958 8 The Gwent County History Volume 1 Gwent in Prehistory and Early History University of Wales Press Retrieved 12 July 2021 The Gwent County History Volume 5 The Twentieth Century University of Wales Press Retrieved 12 July 2021 Dr Christopher Currie MA D Phil Oxon FRHistS FSA IHR Retrieved 25 February 2015 a b c Contributors to the VCH IHR Retrieved 25 February 2015 Professor Richard Hoyle appointed as VCH Director amp General Editor IHR 22 May 2014 Retrieved 25 February 2015 Medieval specialist Catherine Clarke to lead new IHR research centre and the VCH Victoria County History www victoriacountyhistory ac uk Retrieved 8 July 2019 Mary Bateson beyond notability wikibase cloud Retrieved 15 December 2022 Dodds Madeleine Hope 1885 1972 historian Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press 2004 doi 10 1093 ref odnb 60805 Retrieved 11 October 2020 Subscription or UK public library membership required Maud Sellers beyond notability wikibase cloud Retrieved 15 December 2022 Margerie Venables Taylor beyond notability wikibase cloud Retrieved 15 December 2022 Further reading editBaker Timothy 1993 The Victoria County History of Middlesex The Local Historian 23 155 62 Beckett J V 2008 Local history family history and the Victoria County History new directions for the twenty first century Historical Research 81 212 350 65 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2281 2007 00426 x Beckett J V 2009 The Thoroton Society and the Victoria County History Transactions of the Thoroton Society of Nottinghamshire 113 119 36 Beckett J V 2009 Libraries and the Victoria County History Library amp Information History 25 4 217 26 doi 10 1179 175834809x12489648790016 S2CID 162269824 Beckett J V 2011 Writing Hampshire s history the Victoria County History 1899 1914 Proceedings of the Hampshire Field Club amp Archaeological Society 66 201 214 Beckett J V 2011 W G Hoskins the Victoria County History and the study of English local history Midland History 36 115 127 doi 10 1179 004772911x12956221816321 S2CID 159827576 Beckett J V 2011 W G Hoskins and the Victoria County History in Leicestershire Transactions of the Leicestershire Archaeological and Historical Society 85 165 191 Beckett J V 2011 Topography and landscape history the role of the Victoria County History Landscape History 32 2 57 65 doi 10 1080 01433768 2011 10594659 S2CID 162189941 Beckett J V 2011 The Victoria County History in Devon 1899 1910 Devonshire Association Report and Transactions 143 283 310 Beckett J V 2011 The Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society and the Victoria County History Transactions of the Cumberland amp Westmorland Antiquarian amp Archaeological Society 3rd ser 11 207 225 Beckett J V 2011 Canon Thomas Taylor of St Just and the Victoria County History in Cornwall 1899 1938 Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall 31 44 Beckett J V 2014 The Victoria County History in Yorkshire the past the present and the future Northern History 51 2 330 343 doi 10 1179 0078172X14Z 00000000068 S2CID 161292986 Beckett J V 2014 The Victoria County History in the Midlands Midland History 39 1 133 143 doi 10 1179 0047729X14Z 00000000037 S2CID 161279919 Beckett J V Bristow Matthew Williamson Elizabeth 2013 The Victoria County History 1899 2012 a diamond jubilee celebration London Victoria County History ISBN 9781905165735 Beckett J V Watkins Charles 2011 Natural history and local history in late Victorian and Edwardian England the contribution of the Victoria County History Rural History 22 59 87 doi 10 1017 s0956793310000142 S2CID 162280058 Cooper Janet 1992 The Victoria County History In Neale Kenneth ed Essex Heritage essays presented to Sir William Addison as a tribute to his life and work for Essex history and literature Oxford Leopard s Head pp 15 30 Currie C R J 1999 Victoria County History History Today 49 12 28 30 Dunning R W 2006 The Victoria County History of Cornwall an uncertain start Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall 14 21 Elrington Christopher 1992 The Victoria County History The Local Historian 22 128 37 Hackett Mel Whitston Kerry 2008 The Little Big Red Book a celebration of 75 years of the Victoria County History at the Institute of Historical Research Woodbridge Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 978 1 904356 14 1 Lilley Keith D 2012 Review Article The Victoria County History and the landscape of towns a review and critique 13 1 70 74 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Pugh R B 1971 The Victoria County History British Studies Monitor 2 15 23 Williamson Elizabeth 2001 Heritage and history the historic built environment and the Victoria County History The Historian 72 44 47 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Victoria County History Official website nbsp The Victoria County History at Boydell amp Brewer Professor Christopher Elrington Daily Telegraph obituary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Victoria County History amp oldid 1209579674, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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