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Hitchin

Hitchin
Administration
District: North Hertfordshire
County: Hertfordshire
Region: East of England
Nation: England
Other
Ceremonial County: Hertfordshire
Traditional County: Hertfordshire
Postal County: Hertfordshire

Hitchin is a town in Hertfordshire, England.

Hitchin is first noted as the site of a religious house founded by Offa, King of Mercia. The name comes from the Hicce Anglo Saxon tribe who settled in northern Hertfordhsire and southern Bedfordshire in the sixth century. By 1086 Hitchin is described as a Royal manor in the Domesday Book. Evidence has been found to suggest that Offa had his capital here at some period, possibly on Windmill Hill. The modern name 'Hitchin' first appears in 1618 in a document called. the 'Hertfordshire Feet of Fines'

The town flourished on the wool trade, and located on the Icknield Way and by the seventeenth century Hitchin was a staging post for coaches coming from London. With the advent of the railways in the nineteenth century, the town developed as a centre for the grain trade. By the close of the twentieth century, Hitchin had become a satellite dormitory town for London.

Hitchin is also the venue for the annual Rhythms of the World festival, which is the largest free festival of world music in the UK.

Twinning

Hitchin is twinned with:

Nearby villages

  • Preston
  • Ashwell
  • Great Wymondley
  • Little Wymondley
  • Graveley
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