River Churn

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Churn
River
River Churn near Baunton
Country England
Counties Gloucestershire, Wiltshire
Towns Cirencester, Cricklade
Source
 - location Seven Springs, Gloucestershire, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire
Mouth River Thames
 - location Cricklade, Wiltshire
Length 25 km (16 mi)
Discharge for Cerney Wick
 - average 0.86 m3/s (30 cu ft/s)
 - max 4.70 m3/s (166 cu ft/s) 31 January 1971
 - min 0.00 m3/s (0 cu ft/s) 5 November 1995
Discharge elsewhere (average)
 - Cirencester 0.77 m3/s (27 cu ft/s)
 - Perrott's Brook 0.62 m3/s (22 cu ft/s)

The River Churn is one of the Cotswold rivers that feeds into the River Thames catchment. It rises at Seven Springs, Gloucestershire (on the A436 road) near Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England and flows south across the Cotswold dip slope, passing through Cirencester and joining the River Thames near Cricklade in Wiltshire. Its length from source to confluence with the Thames is considerably greater than the Thames itself from source to the same confluence but, historically, the Churn is a regarded as a tributary. The length of the River Churn is approximately 25 kilometres.[1]

The name Churn is ancient, certainly pre-Roman and probably has its origins in the Celtic language, spoken by the Dobunni tribe, who controlled the area before the Roman conquest in the 1st Century. The original name may have sounded similar to Korinn. It has been suggested that the origin of the word is associated with the ancient British Cornovii tribe.[2]

Cognate names and name elements from the area are Cerney, Ciren and Corin as found in the villages of North Cerney, South Cerney, and Cerney Wick, modern Cirencester, and the Roman town name Corinium. All these places are on or close to the River Churn. The Coln and the Thames both feed the waters of the Western component of the Cotswold Water Park, which is made up of redundant gravel beds and is situated between Cirencester and Cricklade.

Much of the catchment basin of the River Churn is known to have been an important area of Roman settlement in the second to fourth centuries AD. [citation needed]

As of the year 2006 the national government is engaged in a planning study to analyse methods of mitigating future flooding associated with the River Churn.[3] However, at times the River Churn is known to stop flowing completely; in September 2011 the river bed was completely dry at Latton.

See also

References

  1. River Churn Crossing and Data
  2. Cirencester History Summary
  3. United Kingdom Environment Agency River Churn Catchment, Autumn, 2006
Next confluence upstream River Thames Next confluence downstream
- River Churn River Key (south)

Coordinates: 51°39′N 1°53′W / 51.650°N 1.883°W / 51.650; -1.883


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