Human settlement in England
A descendant of the Royal Oak at Boscobel House
Boscobel is a civil parish in the east of Shropshire , England, on the border with Staffordshire . To the north is the Staffordshire village of Bishops Wood .
According to the 2001 census it had a population of 12.[ 1] Because of its small population, it shares a parish council with the neighbouring Donington parish. It is the smallest parish in Shropshire by population – the smallest by area is Deuxhill .
Boscobel House
It is the site of Boscobel House , home to the Giffard family, owners of the Boscobel Royal Oak , where Charles II hid in an oak tree after losing the Battle of Worcester in 1651.
A historical romance on the subject was published as Boscobel in 1872 by William Harrison Ainsworth .
The "pine groves of Boscobel" are mentioned (twice) by Charles Kinbote , narrator of Vladimir Nabokov 's 1962 postmodern novel Pale Fire , in descriptions of his escape from Zembla .
White Ladies Priory
The ruins of White Ladies Priory
Also in the parish is White Ladies Priory .
See also
References
External links
Media related to Boscobel at Wikimedia Commons
Unitary authorities Major settlements (cities in italics) Rivers Canals Topics