User:MrX/Berkeley Gloucestershire

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Berkeley is a town in Gloucestershire, England. It has the distinction of not being that other one (in California); or being that school of music on the other American coast (which is spelled Berklee, anyway).

Berkeley is situated 8 miles west of Dursley and 18 miles south of Gloucester.

History[edit | edit source]

Berkeley was first recorded in 824AD as Berclea, from the Old English for "birch-tree wood or clearing". The name mutated into Berkeley over the years. The name is pronounced Barklee not Burklee. To call a stupid person a burk derives from this mispronunciation, so don’t be a burk call it bark.

Berkeley was the site of Berkeley nuclear power station, which had two Magnox nuclear reactors. This power station has since been decommissioned by Montgomery Burns and all that remains are the two reactors encased in concrete along with Mr Burns and his assistant Smithers.

Montgomery Burns

The Berkeley power station site has, using a bequest from Mr Burns, now been redeveloped into a college campus.

Courses are available leading ultimately to degrees in the areas of Culinary Arts (Cookery), Gaia Studies (Greek Mythology), Gender Studies (All men are beasts) and Grievance Studies (My victimhood trumps your victimhood), Air Guitar (saves on buying an instrument), Climate Change (How to profit from scientific fraud), Understanding English History through the Medium of Dance and other valuable qualifications necessary for a future vibrant UK economy.

That seminal work 'The Ladybird Book of Climate Change' by that renowned expert in talking to plants HRH Prince Charles is required reading for all students irrespective of their areas of study. Sadly it is not a parody as this article attempts to be.

A Work of Fiction

In keeping with the sensibilities of today's student much attention is paid to Politically Correctness.

• The reference to 'Campus' has now been dropped as it could offend homosexual cats.

• Safe spaces are freely available where students can hide when confronted by any unpleasantness for example Pizza not being available in the College Refectory.

• In order to deal with that modern scourge 'Cultural Appropriation' all students are subjected to DNA testing. For example only those with Mexican DNA can wear Sombreros, only those with Asian DNA may practice yoga in the sports hall. A Scandinavian student was recently expelled for playing the didgeridoo.








Local Hostelries[edit | edit source]

The Lammastide[edit | edit source]

There is some dispute as how this Berkeley pub and restaurant acquired its name.

Some say it refers to a now defunct festival, held on the 1st August, in which bread made from the first harvest of corn was blessed.

A likelier explanation is that it refers to the restaurant's culinary speciality roast loin of Llama. This signature dish was developed by Al Paca the distinguished Peruvian chef.


A Lama - Yummy








The Libation[edit | edit source]

In the nearby village of Ham is the award winning pub 'The Libation' known locally as the 'Libby'. The Libby specialises in real ales and ciders enough to satisfy any aspiring inebriate.

In a pleasing juxtaposition given the name of the village in which it is situated the pub also breeds its own pigs. The sty doubles as a petting zoo for the kiddies. The favoured breed is the renowned Gloucestershire Old Spot. They are so called as they come from Gloucestershire and have large dark spots on their bodies.

Percy - The Kiddies Favourite

A favourite item on the Libby's menu is Ham, Egg and Chips. The ham being provided by the pub's own pigs. Each pig is has its own name tag. For example Peter, Paul, Porky, Penelope, Pinky, Perky, Percy etc. just the thing to educate children on the meaning of alliteration.

Families are encouraged to choose the pig which is to be slaughtered for their meal. They can opt to watch as the unfortunate creature is dragged away its squeals of horror drowned out by the squeals of delight from the children. What larks for Tamsin, Tarquin, Allegra and Chantelle.









The Stagecoach[edit | edit source]

In another nearby village, Newport, is the Coach House pub. Rejecting a porcine theme the pub has opted for their speciality: the Dragon Pie. The original recipe was made from Welsh Dragons foolish enough to cross the Severn bridge (the river Severn divides Wales from England). Unfortunately the species are now on the brink of extinction. Attempts to breed the Welsh Dragon with the Komodo Dragon were unsuccessful. The pub though blamed factors including that old favourite climate change with Man Bear Pig developing an appetite for dragons.

Taffy The Welsh Dragon - Also Yummy
Komodo Dragon - It was not to be










Notable Berkeley People[edit | edit source]

Edward Jenner[edit | edit source]

Edward Jenner

Berkeley was the birthplace of Edward Jenner. After studying medicine he worked as the local GP. In 1796, realising that smallpox could not catch milkmaids he performed a pioneering experiment by inoculating a chicken with cowpox thus discovering vaccination.

Berkeley Hunt[edit | edit source]

Berkeley Hunt (not to be confused with The Berkeley Hunt – I say, tally ho! Let’s kill some foxes & perhaps some oiks) was a well known local actor.

Noel Coward

He first appeared in the acclaimed production of A Mid Summer Night’s Dream. His Bottom was much admired by Noel Coward. Also appearing in the play was his friend Frampton Cotterell who played Oberon, King of the Faeries and never lived it down.

Berkeley Hunt went on to play opposite the lovely Easter Compton in the remake of Brief Encounters directed by Leonard Stanley. The film depicts a doomed romance in an underwear factory.

He appeared as Sherlock Holmes with Moreton Valence as Dr Watson in the film ‘The Second Stain’. Here Holmes attempts to establish who keeps squirting tomato sauce on the carpet. On being congratulated by Watson on resolving the mystery Holmes utters the famous words ‘alimentary my dear Watson’.

Despite that and other successes, in his twilight years he was reduced to appearing in Pantomime. The ultimate low point came when he appeared in the panto Dick Whittington as the back end of a pantomime cow. The front end was played by the exotic actress Ampney Crucis. Traditionally the pantomime cow would come on stage do a little dance and twirl its udders to howls of laughter from the audience. Ampney while in costume accused Berkeley of being careless where he put his hands, ‘you should concentrate on manipulating my udders, you disgusting thespian’ she cried. The ensuing scandal wrecked Berkeley’s career.

A blue plaque in commemoration of the actor Berkeley Hunt does not appear on the house in which he was born.

The Berkeley Hunt[edit | edit source]

The Berkeley Hunt (not to be confused with the actor Berkeley Hunt) was formed in the 12th century to hunt the stag. Later foxes and other vermin became the prey. The huntsman used hounds to flush out and attack the prey.

One of the breeds of hound popular for this purpose was the Bagel (not to be confused with a Beagle which is a type of bread).

A Beagle
A Bagel

The most well known Master of the Hunt was Sir Tarquin FitzHerbert. Sir Tarquin was a brute of a man standing over six feet tall and heavily built. His riding britches were so tight it cut off the blood supply to his feet. The britches became the inspiration for the G-Suit now worn by fighter pilots.

He was a man of prodigious appetites and was fond of the ladies. Nothing in a skirt was safe from his advances until that fateful day when he saw a kilted Jock McTavish bent over in the local pub. Sir Tarquin walked with a limp ever since.

Hounds were kept together in special kennels in Berkeley. Sir Tarquin did however have a favourite which he kept at his home. This particular dog had two parallel lines burnt into its rear end having backed into a two bar electric fire. Part of his ear was missing following paw to paw combat with a wild boar. He also walked on three legs following a run in with a tractor. His tail was missing due to a fight with another dog who insultingly called him Tripod. Lucky as he was known, would often lie gazing lovingly at his master while being kicked in the genitals.

So highly regarded were Bagels that the ship carrying Charles Darwin to the Galapagos Islands was named HMS Bagel. It was on the Galapagos Islands that Darwin discovered Evolution.

Berkeley Castle[edit | edit source]

The Castle was built to keep out the Welsh. Clearly this did not work as the buggers are now everywhere.

Castle Defences[edit | edit source]

The land surrounding the castle could be flooded to keep out invaders. These defences were tested every 30 years. On a sunny afternoon the peasantry from the surrounding villages would be invited to picnic in the fields. The sluices would be opened and water from the nearby River Severn would flood the fields. A high death toll would demonstrate that the defences were still effective. It was also a way of culling the elderly too weak to escape from the flood waters.

Berkeley Castle Heirlooms[edit | edit source]

The Castle contains a number of interesting artefacts.

Sir Francis Drake Incorporating His Chest

They include Sir Francis Drake's chest, where the rest of his body is, nobody knows.

Another item is Queen Elizabeth I's cadeena. It was in mediaeval times customary for visitors to the castle to bring their own cutlery, contained within a cadeena, hence Elizabeth’s cry to the servants where’s me forknknife.

The Berkeley Estate[edit | edit source]

The Berkeley Castle estate includes a deer park, farms, a stretch of the River Severn and the land on which the Slimbridge Wildfowl and Poultry Emporium (SWPE) is situated. The SWPE was founded by Sir Walter Scott and supplies succulent ducks, geese, chickens and turkeys to the local populace.

A popular Christmas delicacy is the 9 bird roast that is a Wren, within a Robin, within a Sparrow, within Blackbird, within an Owl, within a Greater Crested Grebe (but only in season), within a Penguin, within a Swan, within a Giant Moa.

A Bit of History[edit | edit source]

Berkeley town goes back in time as far as the Castle, and evidence suggests that there was once a large Saxon settlement. In those days Berkeley was a violent place, there was a lot of Saxon violence.

The last court jester in England, Dickie Pearce, died after falling from the Castle’s Great Hall Minstrels' gallery. This was doubly tragic as not only did he die, no one laughed.

The castle contains a record breaking four-poster bed. The bed has been in the longest continuous period of use than any other piece of furniture in the UK. IKEA are particularly proud of this product.

A Purveyor of Four Poster Beds

The castle was ransacked in the 14th Century by Hugh Dispensing-Chemist the favourite (nudge, nudge, wink, wink) of the then King Edward II (thought to like the ladies and the chaps i.e. he was bipedal). Ted, as he was known to his friends, was deposed by his wife Queen Isabella and her ally Roger Mortimer, (alias Bob Mortimer who went on to find fame with Vic Reeves). Edward was brought to Berkeley Castle where he was allegedly murdered in 1327. The insertion of a red hot poker into his fundament was the likely cause of the King’s demise. His cries of ‘what a bummer’ were said to have been heard ten miles away.