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  1. Medieval hunting - Wikipedia

  2. Ancient Oaks of England: Deer parks

  3. What is a deer park? | Landscapes history | National Trust

  4. Medieval deer park - Medievalists.net

  5. The medieval bishop's palace and deer park, Stow Park - Historic …

  6. लोगों ने यह भी पूछा
    In medieval and Early Modern England, Wales and Ireland, a deer park ( Latin: novale cervorum, campus cervorum) was an enclosed area containing deer. It was bounded by a ditch and bank with a wooden park pale on top of the bank, or by a stone or brick wall. The ditch was on the inside increasing the effective height.
    Designed to keep intruders out and animals in, park boundaries usually comprised inner ditches and outer banks surmounted by a palisade or wall. While in the earlier Middle Ages parks were often distanced from their associated houses, the later medieval aristocracy preferred parks that were next to or encompassed their residences.
    Most parks were created between 1200 and 1350. It is estimated that there were once over 3,000 deer parks across England, Scotland and Wales. These varied greatly in size, from several to thousands of acres. Today, only a handful remain, yet documentary evidence and boundary earthworks continue to provide evidence of now-lost parks.
    The landscape within a deer park was manipulated to produce a habitat that was both suitable for the deer and also provided space for hunting. "Tree dotted lawns, tree clumps and compact woods" provided "launds" (pasture) over which the deer were hunted and wooded cover for the deer to avoid human contact.
  7. The Medieval Parks of England - JSTOR

  8. Parks in Medieval England | Reviews in History

  9. Bradgate Park - Wikipedia