Curdworth

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Curdworth
Curdworth (Warwickshire)
Curdworth

Curdworth shown within Warwickshire
Population <1500
OS grid reference SP179927
 - London 115.7mi
Parish Curdworth
District North Warwickshire
Shire county Warwickshire
Region West Midlands
Constituent country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town Sutton Coldfield
Postcode district B76
Dialling code 01675
Police Warwickshire
Fire Warwickshire
Ambulance West Midlands
European Parliament West Midlands
UK Parliament North Warwickshire
List of places: UKEnglandWarwickshire

Coordinates: 52°31′55″N 1°44′07″W / 52.5319, -1.7353

Curdworth is a village and civil parish in the North Warwickshire district of the county of Warwickshire in England. In 1995 and 2000 Curdworth earned the title of Best Kept Village in Warwickshire, in the large village class.[1] The village also earned the title in 2007 of Best Kept Village in North Warwickshire, in the medium-sized village class.[2]


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[edit] Location

Curdworth is 11 miles east of the centre of Birmingham. North Warwickshire borders the Warwickshire borough of Nuneaton and Bedworth to the east, the county of Leicestershire to the north-east, Staffordshire to the north-west, Sutton Coldfield to the west and Birmingham in the West Midlands to the south.

The village is close to Junction T1 of the M6 Toll and Junction 9 of the M42 motorways, Hams Hall road freight terminal (on the site of the old Hams Hall power stations) and The Belfry Golf Courses and Hotel.

Curdworth is on the very border line of West Midlands and North Warwickshire.

[edit] History

Curdworth and Minworth both originated in the 6th or 7th centuries, being established by Angles settlers, and are historically associated with the Arden family (William Shakespeare's maternal relations). Curdworth is probably corrupted from Crida's Worth. Worth means property of and the Angle called Crida owned land here. Curdworth is mentioned in the Domesday Survey (1086).

The local parish church is dedicated to St Nicholas and St Peter ad Vincula. Adjacent to the churchyard is the King George V Playing Fields, which was originally a raised clay and pebble base for a Medieval Saxon Manor complex, which was attached to the church. This site and the moated Curdworth Hall, also a Saxon structure that was located at the top of Farthing Lane, were of great importance in the area.

The remains of a moat, associated with the Ardens, are now buried under the M42. This site is thought to have been their home before they moved to Park Hall in Castle Bromwich.

At the edge of the playing fields is ‘The Bomb Hole', as known by locals, which is actually a Mild Pit, where a Saxon fertiliser consisting of clay and calcium carbonate was extracted.

[edit] Civil War

In August 1642 the first skirmish between the Roundheads and Cavaliers of the Civil War (1642-49) took place in the fields to the south of Curdworth, the Battle of Curdworth Bridge. One of the musket balls fired left a mark in a nave window. Some of the casualties are supposed to be buried in the graveyard.

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