Many areas of the north west had their landscapes transformed
by the enclosure of upland commons during the later eighteenth and nineteenth century. Parliamentary enclosure created new, regular landscapes of fields, access roads, quarries and new farmsteads. These features still form a distinctive element of the modern countryside and contrast sharply with the landscape in those upland areas which were not enclosed.
Transforming Fell and Valley is the first detailed survey, based on original source material, of why this enclosure was undertaken, who was responsible for the decision-making, how the new landscapes were created and the effect the changes had on rural society. The book is lavishly illustrated with photographs and maps, demonstrating the impact enclosure has left on the upland landscape of today.
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