EXETER, a city and county of a city, municipal borough, and the county town of Devonshire, England, 172 m. W.S.W. of London, on the S.R. and the G.W.R. Pop. (1931) History.—Exeter was the Romano-British country town of Isca Damnoniorum. Mosaic pavements, potsherds, coins and other relics have been found, and probably traces of the Roman walls survive. It is said to be the Caer Isce of the Britons, and its importance as a British stronghold is shown by the great earth work which the Britons threw up to defend it, on the site of which the castle was afterwards built, and by the number of roads which branch from it. Exeter is famous for the number of sieges which it sustained as the chief town in the south-west of England. In roor it was unsuccessfully besieged by the Danes, but in the following year was given by King Aethelred to Queen Emma, who appointed as reeve, Hugh, a Frenchman, owing to whose treachery it was taken and destroyed by Sweyn in 1003. By r oso, however, it had recovered, and was chosen by Leofric as the new seat of the bishops of Devon. In r o68, after a siege of 18 days, Exeter surrendered to the Conqueror, who threw up a castle which was called Rougemont, from the colour of the rock on which it stood. Again in 1137 the town was held for Matilda by Baldwin de Redvers for three months and surrendered, at last, owing to lack of water. Three times subsequently Exeter held out successfully for the king—in 1467 against the Yorkists, in 1497 against Perkin Warbeck, and in 1549 against the men of Cornwall and Devon, who rose in defence of the old religion. During the civil wars the city declared for parliament, but was in 1643 taken by the royalists, who held it until 1646. The only other historical event of importance is the entry of William, prince of Orange, in 1688, shortly after his arrival in England. Exeter was a borough by prescription some time before the Conquest, since the burgesses are mentioned in the Domesday Survey. Its first charter granted by Henry I. gave the burgesses all the free customs which the citizens of London enjoyed, and was confirmed and enlarged by most of the succeeding kings. By 1227 government by a reeve had given place to that by a mayor and four bailiffs, which continued until the Municipal Reform act of 1835. Numerous trade gilds were incorporated in Exeter, one of the first being the tailors' gild, incorporated in 1466. This by 1482 had become so powerful that it interfered with the government of the town, and was dissolved on the petition of the burgesses. Another powerful gild was that of the merchant adventurers, incorporated in 1559, which is said to have dictated laws to which the mayor and bailiffs submitted.
From 1295 to 1885 Exeter was represented in parliament by two members, but in the latter year the number of representa tives was reduced to one. Exeter was formerly noted for the manufacture of woollen goods, introduced in Elizabeth's reign, and the value of its exports at one time exceeded half a million sterling yearly. The trade declined partly owing to the stringent laws of the trade gilds, and by the beginning of the 19th century had entirely disappeared, although at the time of its greatest prosperity it had been surpassed in value and importance only by that of Leeds.
Site.—The ancient city occupies a broad ridge of land, which rises steeply from the left bank of the Exe. At the head of the ridge is the castle, on the site of a great British earthwork. There is a maze of streets within the ancient walls, the line of which may be traced. All the gates have disappeared. The suburbs, which have greatly extended since the beginning of the 19th century, contain many good streets, terraces and detached villas. The lofty mound of the castle is laid out as a promenade, with trees and walks.
The guildhall in the High Street is an Elizabethan building, and contains some portraits by Sir Peter Lely. The assize hall and sessions house dates from 1774. There is a good collection of local birds, and some remarkable pottery and bronze relics ex tracted from barrows near Honiton or found in various parts of Devonshire in the Albert Memorial Museum. Of the castle, called Rougemont, a portion of a gateway tower which may be late Norman, remains. Traces are also seen of the surrounding earthworks, which may have belonged to the original British stronghold. The Devon and Exeter Institution, founded in 1813, contains a large and valuable library. The Grammar school was founded by Walter de Stapeldon, bishop of Exeter and founder of Exeter College, Oxford, in 1332, and refounded in 1629, but occupies modern buildings outside the city. There are two market-houses in the city, and many institutions, including the hospital or almshouse of William Wynard, recorder of Exeter is one of the principal railway centres in the south-west, and it also has some shipping trade, communicat ing with the sea by way of the Exeter ship-canal, originally cut in the reign of Elizabeth (1564), and enlarged in 1675 and 1827. This is the first canal carried out in the United Kingdom for the purpose of enabling sea-going vessels to pass to an inland port.
The river Exe was very early utilized by small craft trading to Exeter, parliament having granted powers for the improvement of the navigation by the construction of a canal 3 m. long from Exeter to the river; at a later date this canal was extended lower down to the tidal estuary of the Exe. Previous to the year 182o it was only available for vessels of a draft not exceeding 9 ft., but by deepening it, raising the banks, and constructing new locks, vessels drawing 14 ft. of water were enabled to pass up to a basin and wharves at Exeter. These works were carried out under the advice of Thomas Telford. A floating basin is accessible to vessels of 3 5o tons. Larger vessels lie at Topsham, at the junction of the canal with the estuary of the Exe; while at the mouth of the estuary is the port of Exmouth. The imports are coal, oilcake, timber, slates, grain, fish, cement, manure, pig iron, etc., while ground barytes, timber, scrap iron, paper and cider are exported. Brewing, paper-making and iron-founding are carried on, and the city is an important centre of agricultural trade. The parliamentary borough returns one member. The eastern suburb of Heavitree is an urban district with a population (1921) 11,465.