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  1. Mar 14, 2021 · The old Roman settlement gave its name to the new Saxon town. The Saxons called a Roman settlement a ceaster. They called this one Weogoran ceaster. Weorgoran means people of the winding river. In time the name changed to Worcester. In 680 AD Worcester was given a bishop and a cathedral. Once it was the seat of a bishop Saxon Worcester grew ...

  2. Oswald and Eadnoth, from a late 13th to early 14th century psalter. Worcester in the years before the first millennium was a centre of monastic learning and church power. Oswald of Worcester was an important reformer, appointed Bishop in 961, jointly with York.

  3. The form of the place name varied over time. At its settlement in the 7th century, by the Angles of Mercia, it was Weogorna. After centuries of warfare against the Vikings and Danelaw it had become a centre for the Anglo-Saxon army or here known as Weogorna ceastre (Worcester Camp).

  4. 3 days ago · The only ancient borough of the middle Severn district, its market was the appointed place of resort from all the surrounding country, its industries attracted more permanent settlers within its walls, its bridge gave accese in peace or war from the Midlands to Herefordshire and the Welsh border.

  5. 5 days ago · The first recorded occupation of the site was prior to 680 ce, and the cester in its name (from Latin castra, “camp”) suggests earlier Roman habitation. In 1086 the town consisted of a castle, cathedral, and small settlement, all surrounded by a wall and deep ditch.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. Nov 17, 2016 · Worcester was initially founded by the Roman Empire during the 1 st Century, and it stood between the route from the Roman cities of Wroxeter and Gloucester. Its position as a trade route soon made it a flourishing town, as the local craftsmen and farmers were able to make a fortune from the constant trade traffic.

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  8. Worcester started life as a staging post along the busy Roman road that ran from Wroxeter to Gloucester. The road crossed the River Severn here and this meant road and river transport could connect at Worcester.

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