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Shropshire
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Covers 1,348 square miles (3,491 sq km), Situated in the West of England. It is
also sometimes called Salop. The county seat is Shrewsbury. With a population of
less than half a million, it is one of England's most sparsely populated counties.
Some two-thirds of the population live in Shrewsbury, Telford or one of the ten
main market towns, while the county's 600 villages and many scattered hamlets are
home to the rest.
In Shropshire there are the popular towns of Shrewsbury,
Telford and
Bucknell
Geography
Shropshire's scenery varies from the meres of the north to the hills of the centre
and south, with breath-taking views from Wenlock Edge, the Long Mynd and The Wrekin,
and around the River Severn as it wanders through the county. The countryside to
the north and east of the Severn, is level; toward the Welsh border and the south
the land is hilly. The main river is the Severn
Industry
It is a working landscape with farming and related industries, business parks and
busy commercial centres.
History
The ancient Watling Street and Offa's Dyke cross the county. In Anglo-Saxon times
Shropshire was a part of the kingdom of Mercia, Athelflaed, daughter of King Alfred
and wife of the Mercian King, fortified Shrewsbury as a regional administrative
centre. After the Norman Conquest it became an important part of the Welsh Marches
and was the scene of much border conflict and castle building for defence. There
are ruins of many medieval castles and old monastic remains. Shropshire's economy
prospered, largely thanks to wool, and that wealth did much over the centuries to
shape the attractive towns that we know today.
Shropshire Flag

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