The Veness Family History

The second, the north-south road coming from Bourton on the Water and going on to Donnington, was built by the Romans as part of the Fosse Way which ran from Bath to Lincoln. The third trackway entered the Cotswolds near Chipping Campden and ran along the north-south ridge, passing near Blockley and Sezincote, through Stow, and from there followed the upland road the Church Icomb and Idbury and then to Bampton. This route was a medieval saltway; one of several trackways through the Cotswolds used in transporting salt during the Middle Ages. It probably followed a path trodden out along the ridge in much earlier times. from its earliest beginnings, Stow has been a market town supplying the surrounding villages and farms, as well as providing food and lodgings for travellers. In 1107, Henry I decreed that the town (then called Edwardstow) should have a weekly market. During the Middle Ages wool became the major produce of the Cotswolds; the hills almost becoming one large sheepwalk. Because of there location on major roads, three towns became market centres in which sheep fairs were held; they were Cirencester, Northleach, and Stow on the Wold. In addition Stow became the horse fair town of the Cotswolds. Echoes of its former self can still be heard in the colour and cadence of the Cotsall and Romany tongues, as bargains are struck between dealer and buyer. It appears, too, that our Keens had a deep knowledge of horses. Until the mid-twentieth century the comfortable, old-fashioned, inns were filled on market and fair days with farmers, and their talk was all of horses, cattle, sheep and pigs, and the price of barley. Recently it has attracted more and more tourists and sightseers. The town grew up about the wide marketplace, being fortunate in having this flat space on its hilltop. The picturesque alley-ways leading off it came later, as the town grew. The marketplace, enclosed on four sides by shops and houses, and with a great elm tree for shade, a small town hall in its centre, is still the heart of Stow. The tower of St Edward’s Church is visible above the trees for miles around, although it does not dominate the town itself. St Edward’s was originally founded about 870, and has been reconstructed several times since. In the fifteenth century its great tower was built with funds provided by the town’s wealthy wool merchants. Left: Worcester Cathedral. The earliest records of our family of Keens are from the register of St Edward’s Church in Stow on the Wold; a register which starts in 1558, although the initial records are sparse, and do not become comprehensive for more than another 100 years. 11 | P a g e

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