HOUNSLOW


Meaning of HOUNSLOW in English

outer borough of London, part of the historic county of Middlesex. It lies in the valley of the River Thames, on the western periphery of the metropolis. It was made a borough in 1965 by the amalgamation of the former metropolitan boroughs of Brentford and Chiswick and Heston and Isleworth with the Feltham Urban District. Hounslow includes the areas of (from west to east) East Bedfont, Hatton, Lower Feltham, Feltham, Hanworth (in part), Cranford, Norwood Green (in part), Hounslow, Heston, Osterley, Isleworth, Brentford, and Chiswick. Until the 1800s the borough was mainly agricultural and forest land punctuated by small villages such as Hounslow, which was recorded in Domesday Book (1086 CE) as Honeslaw. In 1016 Brentford was the scene of a battle between the Danish king Canute (reigned in England 101635) and the forces of the English Edmund II (reigned 1016). In the late 13th century a bridge was built across the River Brent, and Brentford grew as a market town in rural Middlesex. During the English Civil Wars, Chiswick (on the present Ealing-Hounslow border) was the site of the Battle of Turnham Green, which was fought at Brentford, Turnham Green, and Acton in 1642; as a result of the battle, the Parliamentarians blocked the advance of Charles I into London. In the early 19th century Hounslow Heath was still a vast woodland extending over thousands of acres; the area was notorious for attacks by highwaymen. Chiswick House, Syon House, and Osterley House are all set in pleasant landscaped parkland. The present Chiswick House was built (1729) in Palladian style by the 3rd earl of Burlington. The 16th-century Syon House was the home of the dukes of Northumberland. Now open to the public, it features vast and richly ornamented halls; its Great Conservatory was designed by Charles Fowler in the 1820s. Robert Adam rebuilt and redecorated the 16th-century Osterley Park House in Isleworth, and the gardens are now a sizable public park. Other mansions include Boston Manor House (dating from the 1620s) and Hogarth's House, which displays prints of William Hogarth's work. The Kew Bridge Steam Museum and the Musical Museum are in Brentford. Other cultural and recreational sites include the Brentford Fountain Leisure Centre, the Watermans Arts Centre, and the Centrespace Theatre. The picturesque Thames riverside communities of Chiswick and Strand-on-the-Green contrast with the large industrial complexes of Brentford and Feltham. In the 19th and 20th centuries industrialization changed the face of the area as Brentford and Chiswick became linked; Chiswick, however, retained much of its elegance despite the factories that sprang up along the Great West Road and elsewhere. Feltham grew rapidly after World War II under the influence of the adjoining London (Heathrow) Airport to the west. Two of Greater London's major traffic arteries are located in the north of the borough. Hounslow is a multiethnic borough, with one-fourth of its population consisting of ethnic minorities; South Asians are especially numerous, accounting for one-sixth of the total population. Area 23 square miles (59 square km). Pop. (1998 est.) 211,600.

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