cerne abbas dorset

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Old houses in Cerne Abbas in Dorset in the UK Royalty Free Stock Photo
Tower of the St Mary\'s Church in Cerne Abbas, Dorset, England Royalty Free Stock Photo
Cerne Abbas Giant, Dorset England Royalty Free Stock Photo
Cerne Abbas Dorset England Royalty Free Stock Photo
Half-timbered houses in Cerne Abbas, Dorset Royalty Free Stock Photo
Downland Landscape of South West England Royalty Free Stock Photo
The village pond Royalty Free Stock Photo
Cerne Abbas, Dorset
Cerne Abbas, Dorset Royalty Free Stock Photo
Georgian & Half-timbered houses in Cerne Abbas, Dorset Royalty Free Stock Photo
Quaint Milestone of South West England Royalty Free Stock Photo
Old graveyard Royalty Free Stock Photo
Ancient Hill Figure of South West England Royalty Free Stock Photo
Grand gatehouse in dorset england Royalty Free Stock Photo
Cerne Abbas, Dorset Royalty Free Stock Photo
The village of Cerne Abbas grew up around the great Benedictine abbey, Cerne Abbey, which was founded there in AD 987. Abbas is Medieval Latin for `abbot`. For more than 500 years, the abbey dominated the area. The abbey was surrendered to Henry VIII in 1539 with the Dissolution of the Monasteries and was largely destroyed. In the centuries after the Dissolution, the village thrived as a small market town. Its wealth was partly generated by brewing, its underground water making it famous for the quality of its beer, which was sold as far away as London and was even exported to the Americas.


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