Wallingford

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Wallingford

Image:Wallingford - Oxfordshire dot.png

Statistics
Population: 7,000
Ordnance Survey
OS grid reference:Maps for SU606894
Administration
District: South Oxfordshire
County: Oxfordshire
Region: South East England
Nation:England
Other
Ceremonial county: Oxfordshire
Traditional county: Berkshire
Post office and telephone
Post town: WALLINGFORD
Postcode: OX10
Dialling code: +44-1491
Politics
UK Parliament: Wantage
European Parliament: South East England
Image:England flag large.png

Wallingford is a small town in the Thames Valley in southern England.

It is a strategically important crossing point on the River Thames. During the 1066 Norman conquest of England, the Saxon lord Wigod allowed William the Conqueror's invading armies to cross the Thames from North to South.

Wallingford itself sits on the western side of the Thames; across the river is the village of Crowmarsh Gifford. The two are linked with a notable 900 ft long stone bridge across the Thames and adjacent floodlands.

Given the town's strategic importance, it has been fortified since at least Saxon times, when it was an important part of the kingdom of Wessex and allowed to mint its own coins. Since William and his Norman army were permitted to cross the river unopposed, the town received special favor from the Norman conquerors.

The Treaty of Wallingford was signed there in November 1153, ending the Civil War that had begun after Henry I's death. The town was granted a Royal Charter in 1154 by the new King Henry II, being one of the first towns to receive one (before London, for example).

The Castle was a regular royal residence until the Plague hit the town badly in 1349. The castle declined subsequently (much stone being removed to renovate Windsor Castle) but it became a Royalist stronghold during the English Civil War. It was the last holdout of the Royalists in the region, and the castle withstood a 65 day siege. Oliver Cromwell subsequently ordered the destruction of what was left of the castle and little now remains.

Wallingford has an informal twinning link with Wallingford, Connecticut.

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Wallingford is also the name of some places in the United States:



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