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Items in Reading taken from Old England: A Pictorial Museum (1845) (results page 1)


Reading, capital of Berkshire, on the Kennet, 36 m. N. of London; a town of considerable historic interest; was ravaged by the Danes; has imposing ruins of a 12th-century Benedictine abbey, &c.; was besieged and taken by Essex in the Civil War (1643); birthplace of Archbishop Laud; has an important agricultural produce-market, and its manufactures include iron-ware, paper, sauce, and biscuits.

Population (1907) 61,000

From Nuttall Encylopædia, 1907

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389.—Ruins of reading Abbey in 1721.
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Places Shown

Reading; Berkshire; England