Static Image: | aldreth top view.jpg |
Static Image Caption: | Aerial view of Aldreth |
Country: | England |
Coordinates: | 52.34°N 0.12°W |
Official Name: | Aldreth |
Civil Parish: | Haddenham |
London Distance Mi: | 62 |
London Direction: | S |
Shire District: | East Cambridgeshire |
Shire County: | Cambridgeshire |
Region: | East of England |
Constituency Westminster: | South East Cambridgeshire |
Post Town: | ELY |
Postcode Area: | CB |
Postcode District: | CB6 |
Dial Code: | 01353 |
Os Grid Reference: | TL446735 |
Website: | ECDC |
Aldreth is a hamlet in Cambridgeshire with about 260 residents (2001 census). It is located near the larger village of Haddenham (where the population is listed) and falls under the same Parish council. Aldreth is surrounded by fenland on all sides and is close to the River Great Ouse.
The name "Aldreth" occurs as Alreheða in the 1170 Pipe rolls, and means "landing-place by the alders", from a combination of the Old English words for "alder" and "hythe".[1] The name also occurs a number of times in the text of the 12th century Liber Eliensis, as Alreheðe, with one variant as Alhereðe.[2]
See main article: Hereward the Wake. Aldreth may have been the site of two battles[3] [4] between Hereward the Wake (Anglo-Saxons) and William the Conqueror (Normans). Aldreth was one of three routes, or causeways, into the Isle of Ely at that time; Stuntney Causeway to the south-east, the Earith Causeway to the west-south-west and the Aldreth Causeway south-west of the Isle of Ely.[5] [6]
The village is on an east–west running boulder clay (middle-Pleistocene till) ridge sitting on a belt of mainly Jurassic Kimmerigian clays running south-west from The Wash. To the east is a north–south running belt of geologically more recent Upper-Cretaceous Lower Greensand capped by Lower-Cretaceous Gault Clay; the whole area is surrounded by even more recent fen deposits. To the west, again running north-east—south-west, is a scarp belt of middle-Jurassic sedimentary rocks including limestone and sandstone.[7] [8]
The flat fenland countryside around the village, typical for this part of the region, lies about 16feet above sea-level. The highest point in the village is 23feet above sea-level and the highest point in the area is 85feet at Ely, seven-mile (70NaN0) north-east. In contrast, the highest point in Cambridgeshire, 479feet above sea-level, is at Great Chishill, 21miles almost due south. Holme at nine feet (9.02feet) below sea-level is East Cambridgeshire's (and the United Kingdom's) lowest point, and is 18miles north-west.[9]
Aldreth shares an annual village open day, Blossoms & Bygones, with neighbouring village Haddenham. The event, which includes tractor rides, vintage car and tractor displays, and open gardens, held its 40th anniversary in 2011 with a VE Day theme, with villagers dressed in 1940s costume.[10]