Template:Short description {{#invoke:other uses|otheruses}} Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox river The Beaulieu River (Template:IPAc-en Template:Respell), formerly known as the River Exe,<ref>Lewis, S. (1848) A Topographical Dictionary of England: Southampton County in British History Online</ref> is a small river draining much of the central New Forest in Hampshire, southern England. The river has many small upper branches and its farthest source is Template:Convert from its Template:Convert-long tidal estuary. Unusually, the river, including its bed, is owned by Lord Montagu of Beaulieu.
EtymologyEdit
The current name, Beaulieu is French, meaning "beautiful place". The original name, Exe, is Brythonic, deriving from the Ancient British word *Iska meaning "fishes" or "fish-place" and cognate with the modern Welsh word Pysg (fishes).This derivation applies to many similarly named rivers throughout Britain including the Axe, Exe and Usk, with the names evolving local distinctions over the centuries.
CourseEdit
The Beaulieu River rises near Lyndhurst in the centre of the New Forest, a zone where copses and scattered trees interrupt the relatively neutral sandy heath soil, however with insufficient organic uneroded deposition over millennia to prevent an upper charismatic dendritic drainage basin of many very small streams. This explains the multitude of tiny headwaters across the New Forest. Many coalesce into the flow southeast and then south across the forest heaths to the village of Beaulieu. There the river becomes tidal and once drove a tide mill in the village. The mill ceased operations in 1942.<ref name=Plunkett>Template:Cite journal</ref> Below, the tidal river (estuary) continues to flow south-east through the Forest, passing the hamlet of Bucklers Hard and entering the Solent at Needs Ore. For its final kilometre, it is separated from The Solent by a raised salt marsh known as Gull Island.
Below Beaulieu village the river is navigable to small craft. Bucklers Hard was once a significant shipbuilding centre, building many wooden sailing ships, both merchant and naval, including Nelson's Agamemnon. Since 2000 the navigable channel at the entrance to the river has been marked by a lighthouse known as the Millennium Lighthouse or the Beaulieu River Beacon.<ref name=Davison>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=NFNPA>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
TributariesEdit
The river has two main tributaries, the Beaulieu Abbey Stream to the left and the Hatchet Stream to the right. In addition there are a series of artificial lakes near the mouth of the river, known as the Black Lagoons.
Water qualityEdit
The Environment Agency measures the water quality of the river systems in England. Each is given an overall ecological status, which may be one of five levels: high, good, moderate, poor and bad. There are several components that are used to determine this, including biological status, which looks at the quantity and varieties of invertebrates, angiosperms and fish. Chemical status, which compares the concentrations of various chemicals against known safe concentrations, is rated good or fail.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }} File:UKOpenGovernmentLicence.svg Text was copied from this source, which is available under an Open Government Licence v3.0. © Crown copyright.</ref>
The water quality of the Beaulieu River was as follows in 2019:
Section | Ecological Status |
Chemical Status |
Overall Status |
Length | Catchment | Channel |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Template:Waterqual title | Template:Waterqual good | Template:Waterqual fail | Template:Waterqual mod | Template:Convert | Template:Convert | Heavily modified |
Template:Waterqual title | Template:Waterqual mod | Template:Waterqual fail | Template:Waterqual mod | Template:Convert | Template:Convert | Heavily modified |
Template:Waterqual title | Template:Waterqual mod | Template:Waterqual fail | Template:Waterqual mod | Template:Convert | Template:Convert | Heavily modified |
Template:Waterqual title | Template:Waterqual good | Template:Waterqual fail | Template:Waterqual mod | Template:Convert | Artificial |
Film appearancesEdit
The river was used as a backdrop for some scenes of the 1966 film A Man for All Seasons – the tree-lined waters were used to portray the 16th century River Thames.<ref>Gene Brown (1984) The New York Times Encyclopedia of Film: 1964-1968, Template:ISBN</ref>
GalleryEdit
- Fallen tree bridging beaulieu river.jpg
The infant river upstream from Dunces Arch
- Beaulieu river under railway arch.jpg
The river passes beneath the railway, north of Fulliford Passage
- Beaulieu river upstream of pottern ford.jpg
Bend in the river near Pottern Ford
- Alder trees beaulieu river fawley ford.jpg
Alder trees in the river north of Fawley Ford
- Beaulieu river mill dam.jpg
The Mill Dam at Beaulieu
- Beaulieu river tidal limit.jpg
The upper tidal limit of the river
- Beaulieu river moored boat.jpg
The river between Beaulieu and Bucklers Hard
- Bucklers Hard (1).JPG
The river at Bucklers Hard
- Yacht entering the beaulieu river.jpg
A yacht entering the river from the Solent
- The Millennium Light, Lepe, Hampshire - geograph.org.uk - 16977.jpg
Millennium Lighthouse at the mouth of the river