- This article is about the city in England. For other uses see Sheffield.
Sheffield is a city in the north of England with a history dating
back, at least, to the Bronze Age, and a current population of well over half a million. It is part of the greater metropolitan borough of Sheffield, has grown, from its industrial roots
to encompass a wide economic base and is now the fourth largest city in England, and the only one in South
Yorkshire.
People
People from Sheffield are called Sheffielders. They are also colloquially known as "Dee-dars", apparently after the tonal
qualities of their accent (although the term is in decline and is not nearly as prevalent as "Scouse" is for "Liverpudlian" or "Geordie" is for "Novocastrian"). In fact, many
Yorkshire dialect words and aspects of pronunciation derive from old Norse
([1] ) due to the Viking influence in this region.
Geography
The area, is now part of the region known as South Yorkshire, on
its border with the forests of Nottinghamshire and the Derbyshire Dales. Sheffield was historically part of the West Riding of Yorkshire and, before this, the Saxon shire of Hallamshire. It is located at
53°23' North, 1°28' West.
The city nestles in a natural amphitheatre of seven hills, at the confluence of five rivers; Don , Sheaf,
Rivelin, Loxley and Porter. Directly to the west is the Peak District National Park and the Pennine
hill-range. In fact, one third of Sheffield is actually within the Peak District National Park (no other English city has land
within a national park), and Sheffield is said to be England's greenest city, containing 150 woodlands and 50 public parks.
History
Evidence of cave-dwellers has been found at nearby Creswell Crags in
Derbyshire, and the remains of Britain's earliest known "house", a circle of stones in the shape of a hut-base (dated to around
8,000BC) at what is now Deepcar, in the
North of the city. The discoveries made in the caves of Creswell Crags in the late 1800's, showed that early man (Palaeolithic period) existed at the same time as the mammoth. Thousands of flint,
quartzite, bone and ivory tools were found as well as the bones and teeth of musk ox, hippopotamus and woolly rhinoceros. In
1955, on a site around 22 miles south-west of Sheffield, Lieutenant-Colonel Gell of Hopton Hall found a prehistoric flint
hand-axe, some 150,000 years old ( Lower Palaeolithic period), yet more evidence of early man's existance in the region.
By the Bronze Age the region which we now call Sheffield was attracting more
and more tribal peoples. In about 1500 BC, the Middle Bronze Age tribes reached the area. These people (sometimes called the Urn
people) were armed warriors led by fierce chiefs, who subdued the earlier pastoral dwellers. They built numerous stone circles, both large and small,
(Moscar Moor, Froggat Edge for example) and used bronze tools and weapons which seem to have been brought to the area by traders
over well-established trade routes. Cremation was widely practised, with the ashes (in a cinerary urn) being buried with or
without the building of a cairn. Two Early Bronze Age urns have been found at Crookes
and three Middle Bronze Age barrows found at Lodge Moor.
An Iron Age fort was constructed at Wincobank, in what is now northeastern Sheffield. The ramparts of this fort stood on the summit of a steep hill
above the River Don. It was built by the Celtic Brigantes tribe in the 1st century AD, possibly to withstand the northward
advance of the Roman legions. A minor Roman road also ran through the north of
the city, but Sheffield probably did not grow into a fully-fledged settlement, as such, until the Anglo-Saxon period.
The Saxons founded a settlement beside the River Sheaf, which was called Scafield or Escafeld, and it was at Dore, some six miles south-west, and now a suburb of Sheffield, that King Egbert of Wessex received
the submission of King Eanred of Northumbria in 829 and so became the first Saxon overlord of all England.
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (started by King Alfred) gives little information about the region during this time, but an entry
for the year AD829 names an event which would indicate that in the 350 or so years since Anglian settlers first arrived here, the
land had been well cleared and cultivated and a number of small, well-managed townships had grown up around the original
settlements. Among these were Attercliffe, Bramley, Brightside, Brincliffe, Darnall, Fulwood, Gleadless, Handsworth, Heeley,
Longley, Norton, Owlerton, Shirecliffe, Southey, Tinsley, Totley, Wadsley, Walkley and Woodseats, all of which are now districts
of modern Sheffield. It's interesting to note how many of these names end in 'ley', which signifies a clearing in the forest.
'Ton' at the end of a name means 'an enclosed farmstead', as in Norton and Owlerton.
In the 800's England was effectively divided into seven regions (The Heptarchy) of which the principal four parts were Mercia, Northumbria, Wessex and East Anglia. All but the West Saxons (Wessex), which came to be ruled by Alfred, fell
to the Vikings, as this region was the most distant from their incursions. Wessex
recovered the other three when Eric
Bloodaxe, ruler of York (Jorvik) died in 954. The influence of Viking language on the
regional speech varieties of northern and eastern England is well documented. It is not surprising, therefore, that numerous
'Viking' lexical items are to be found in the traditional dialects of Yorkshire, including Sheffield.
Sheffield retained its Saxon lord for some years after the Norman
Conquest of 1066. It was at the time of the Norman Conquest that Sheffield and the surrounding district was named for the
first time as the manor of "Hallun" or Hallamshire. This is found in the Domesday Book of 1086, which William the Conqueror
ordered to be compiled so that the value of the townships and manors of England could be assessed. The entries in the Domesday
Book are written in a kind of Latin shorthand and the extract for this area begins :
TERRA ROGERII DE BVSLI [LANDS OF ROGER DE BUSLI] M. hi Hallvn, cu XVI bereuvitis sunt. XXIX. carucate trae Ad gld. Ibi hb
Walleff com aula. . . etc.
Translated it reads:
'In Hallam, one manor with its sixteen hamlets, there are twenty-nine carucates [about three thousand acres] to be taxed.
There Earl Waltheof had an "Aula" [hall or court]. There may have been about twenty ploughs. This land Roger de Busli holds of
the Countess Judith. He has himself there two carucates and thirty-three villeins hold twelve carucates and a half. There are
eight acres of meadow, and a pasturable wood, four leuvae [a leuva is thought to be about a mile] in length and four in breadth.
The whole manor is ten leuvae in length and eight broad. In the time of Edward the Confessor it was valued at eight marks of
silver [£5.33]; now at forty shillings [£2.00]. In Ateclive and Escafeld [Attercliffe and Sheffield], two manors, Sweyn had five
carucates of land [five hundred acres] to be taxed. There may have been about three ploughs. This land is said to have been
inland, demesne [domain] land of the manor of Hallam.'
Early in the 12th century the township passed to William de Lovetot, a Norman. He founded the parish
church,- which today is the cathedral [2] ,- and also
built Sheffield Castle around which the city grew.
Mary Queen of Scots spent 14 years, from 28th November 1570 onwards, imprisoned in Sheffield Castle and it's dependent
buildings. The castle park once extended beyond the present Manor Lane, where the remains of Manor Lodge are to be found. Beside them is the Turret House, an Elizabethan building, which may have been
built to accommodate the captive queen. A room, believed to have been the queen's, has an elaborate plaster ceiling and
overmantle, with heraldic decorations.
During the English Civil War, Sheffield changed hands several
times, finally falling to the Parliamentarians, who demolished the Castle in 1648.
The Industrial Revolution brought large scale steel making to Sheffield in the 18th. century. Much of the medieval town was
swept away to be replaced in some part by Georgian elegance, but also by Victorian squalor. Sheffield's city centre has been
largely rebuilt in recent years, but among the concrete and glass of modern buildings, some of the best old buildings have been
retained.
Sheffield's oldest surviving building is Sheffield
Cathedral, while other notable mediaeval buildings include Beauchief
Abbey, the Bishop's
House, and the Old
Queen's Head pub in Pond Hill, which dates from around 1480, with its timber frame still intact.
Some Robin Hood legends link the character to the Sheffield region, not
least the association of "Robert of Locksley" to the Sheffield region of Loxley, and the proximity of the city to the "Barnsdale" Forest.
In 1864, parts of the city were devastated by the Great Sheffield Flood.
The UK Association of Organised Trades was founded in Sheffield in 1866, a forerunner of the TUC. Sheffield Trades Council, still active today,
was founded in 1871.
Industry
By the 14th century, Sheffield was becoming noted for its manufacture of
quality knives, and Chaucer's miller carried a Sheffield knife in the Canterbury Tales. By the 16th century, the city was producing a wide variety of cutlery,
and it was Thomas
Boulsover's invention of Sheffield Plate (silver-plated copper), in the early 18th
century, that made Sheffield world renowned. Cutlery made of Sheffield steel was
regarded highly in 19th century England.
Sheffield's Assay Office
opened in 1773, and stamps precious metals with the city's crown mark.
Sheffield has an international reputation for steel-making, which dates from 1740, when Benjamin Huntsman discovered the crucible
technique for steel manufacture, at his workshop in the district of Handsworth. This process was made obsolete in 1856 by Henry Bessemer's invention of the blast furnace
which allowed the mass production of steel. Bessemer moved his Bessemer Steel Company to Sheffield to be at the heart of the
industry. A more recent major Sheffield steel invention was that of stainless steel by Harry Brearley in 1912, and the work of Profs. F.B.Pickering and T. Gladman throughout the 1960's, 70's and 80's was fundamental
to the development of modern high strength low alloy steels.
While iron and steel have always been the main industries of Sheffield, coal mining has been a major feature of the outlying areas, and the Palace of Westminster in London was built using limestone from quarries in the nearby village
of Anston.
The Sheffield Industrial Museums Trust [3]
, a partnership between Sheffield City Council, Sheffield Hallam University and The Cutlers' Company of Hallamshire, has
preserved key sites associated with the city's industrial heritage, some of which actually still operate ancient equipment for
the public, such as the Abbeydale Industrial
Hamlet and the Kelham Island Museum.
Sport
Sheffield has a long sporting heritage. In 1855, a collective of cricketers joined with
pupils from Collingswood School to form the first ever football club: Sheffield F.C., and by 1860
there were 15 football clubs in Sheffield. There are now only two local clubs in the Football League: Sheffield United and Sheffield Wednesday.
Sheffield also has close ties with snooker, due to the fact that the city's
Crucible Theatre is the venue for the World Snooker Championships.
It also boasts the Sheffield
Eagles rugby league, Sheffield Sharks basketball and Sheffield Steelers ice hockey teams.
The Sheffield
Ski Village is the largest artificial ski resort in Europe, and the city also has two
indoor climbing centres.
Culture
7.2% of Sheffield's working population are employed in the creative industries, well above the national average of 4%
(Sheffield City Council Statistics, 2004) Sheffield has been the home of several well known bands and musicians, with an
unusually large number of synth pop and other electronic outfits hailing from there. These include the Human League, Heaven 17, the Thompson Twins and the more industrially
inclined Cabaret Voltaire. This electronic
tradition has continued, with Moloko and
Autechre, one of the leading lights of so-called intelligent dance music, also basing themselves in Sheffield.
The city is also home to Gatecrasher One and Bed, two of the most popular nightclubs in the north of England.
Sheffield has also seen the birth of Pulp, Def Leppard, Joe Cocker and the free improvisors Derek Bailey and Tony Oxley.
The city's ties with music were acknowledged in 1999, when the National Centre for Popular Music, a museum
dedicated to the subject of popular music was opened. However, it did not
attract sufficient visitors and soon closed. After a stint as a live music venue followed by a period of disuse, it was announced
in February 2003 that the unusual steel-covered building would be given over to the student union at Sheffield
Hallam University. Live music venues in the city include the Leadmill, the City Hall and the
University of Sheffield.
Other famous Sheffielders include the actor Sean Bean and the ex-Monty Python
member, Michael Palin.
Sheffield has two major theatres, the Lyceum Theatre and the Crucible, and four major art galleries, including the modern Millennium Galleries and
the Site Gallery which
specialises in multimedia.
The city also has several museums, including the Sheffield City Museum, the Kelham Island Museum, the Sheffield Fire and Police Museum and Abbeydale Industrial Hamlet.
The films The Full Monty, Threads and Whatever Happened to Harold Smith? were based in the city.
Sheffield's daily newspaper is the Sheffield Star, complemented by the
weekly Sheffield
Telegraph. The BBC's Radio Sheffield, and the independent Hallam FM broadcast to the city.
Sheffield is twinned with Bochum in Germany.
Transport
The M1 motorway links Sheffield to London, while the A57 and A61 roads run east-west and north-south through the city centre. An outer ring road relieves congestion in the east of the city, and an inner ring road due to finally be completed over
the next few years will allow traffic to avoid the city centre. Congestion is a problem, particularly during rush hours in the west of the city.
The city has a tram system, known as the "Sheffield Supertram", operated by Stagecoach. There
is also a sizable bus infrastructure, the hub of which is the Pond Street bus station and
Archway Centre.
Sheffield once had two railway stations, Sheffield Victoria station on the Manchester,
Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway, and Sheffield
Midland station on the Midland Main Line. The former is now
demolished, but the latter is still a major station on the British rail network.
Sheffield City Airport opened in 1997.
Buildings, landmarks and institutions
Notable buildings, landmarks and institutions in Sheffield include:
- Abbeydale Industrial Hamlet, Attercliffe Chapel
- Beauchief Abbey, Birley Spa, Broomhill Church
- Cathedral Church of St Marie, Cobweb Bridge, Crucible Theatre, Cutlers Hall
- Don Valley Stadium
- Hallam FM Arena,
The Hole in the
Road
- Lady's Bridge, Lyceum Theatre
- Millennium
Galleries
- National Centre for Popular
Music
- Park Hill Flats, Peace Gardens, Ponds Forge
- Sheffield Arena,
Sheffield Botanical Gardens, Sheffield Castle, Sheffield Cathedral, Sheffield City
Hall, Sheffield
College, Sheffield General Cemetery, Sheffield Hallam University, Sheffield
Manor, Sheffield Star,
Sheffield Town Hall, Sheffield Winter Gardens, Shepherd Wheel, St. Mary's Parish Church, Handsworth
- Tinsley viaduct
- University of Sheffield
Localities
Districts in the City of Sheffield include:
- Attercliffe
- Beauchief, Beighton, Birley,
Broomhill, Burngreave
- Chapeltown, Crookes, Crosspool
- Darnall, Dore
- Ecclesfield, Ecclesall
- Firth Park, Fulwood
- Gleadless, Grenoside
- Handsworth, Heeley, Hillsborough
- Jordanthorpe
- Loxley
- Manor, Meersbrook, Mosborough
- Norfolk Park, Norton
- Park Hill, Parson Cross
- Sharrow, Stannington,
- Tapton, Totley
- Walkley, Woodhouse, Woodseats
External links
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