Description
Founded as the Roman legionary fortress of Deva and re-founded as an Anglo- Saxon fortified town (burh) in the 900s, Chester was the most important seaport and mercantile city of the North-west. Testament to this are its surviving buildings, especially the unique Rows, stretching along the main four streets of the city — attractive buildings with ground-floor cellars, first-floor halls to the rear, and shops to the front connected by galleries. They originate in the period 1250–1350 and have been repeatedly rebuilt.
Published in association with the University of Chester, the Historical Map of Chester charts these changes over time and tells the story of the people who shaped the town.
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