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・ Woke Up This Morning
・ Woke Up This Morning (With My Mind Stayed On Freedom)
・ Woke Up with a Monster
・ Woke Up with a Monster (song)
・ Wokefield
・ Wokefield Park
・ Woken Furies
・ Wokenwell
・ WokFi
・ WOKH
・ Wokha
・ Wokha district
・ WOKI
・ Woki mit deim Popo
・ Wokiele
Woking
・ Woking (disambiguation)
・ Woking (UK Parliament constituency)
・ Woking Borough Council election, 1998
・ Woking Borough Council election, 1999
・ Woking Borough Council election, 2000
・ Woking Borough Council election, 2002
・ Woking Borough Council election, 2003
・ Woking Borough Council election, 2004
・ Woking Borough Council election, 2006
・ Woking Borough Council election, 2007
・ Woking Borough Council election, 2008
・ Woking Borough Council election, 2010
・ Woking Borough Council election, 2012
・ Woking Borough Council election, 2014


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Woking : ウィキペディア英語版
Woking

Woking () is a large town and civil parish that shares its name with the surrounding local government district, located in the west of Surrey, England. It is at the southwestern edge of the Greater London Urban Area and is a part of the London commuter belt, with frequent trains and a journey time of approximately 24 minutes to Waterloo station. Woking is southwest of Charing Cross in central London. Woking town itself, excluding the surrounding district, has a population of 62,796, with the whole local government district (the borough of Woking) having a population of 99,500 (mid-2011 estimate). Woking has been a Conservative area since the constituency was created in 1950, with Jonathan Lord elected as its Member of Parliament in the 2010 General Election.
==History==

Though Woking's earliest written appearance is in the Domesday Book, it is mentioned as the site of a monastery in an 8th-century context, as ''Wochingas''.〔Birch, W. de Grey, ''Cartularium Saxonicum'', 3 vols., London, 1885–93, no.133.〕 In the Domesday Book it appears as ''Wochinges'', being held in 1086 by King William the Conqueror, Walter FitzOther, constable of Windsor Castle, and Ansgot and Godfrey from Osbern FitzOsbern, then bishop of Exeter.
Modern Woking was formed in the area to the south of the Basingstoke Canal (opened in 1794) around the railway station, built in 1838 at the junction between lines to London, the south coast, and the south-west of England, and the private railway to Brookwood Cemetery, which was developed by the London Necropolis Company as an overflow burial ground for London's dead. As a result, the original settlement 1 mile to the south-east, on the River Wey, became known as "Old Woking". Later, Woking Crematorium at St John's became the first crematorium in the United Kingdom.
The first purpose-built mosque in the UK, the Shah Jahan Mosque on Oriental Road, was commissioned by Shahjehan, Begum of Bhopal (1868–1901), one of the four female Muslim rulers of Bhopal who reigned between 1819 and 1926.
The Martinsyde aircraft company operated a major aircraft factory in the town during World War I and used nearby Brooklands Aerodrome for test flying and deliveries, but it was closed in the mid-1920s. This site was then the home of the engineering firm James Walker & Company for many years. Known as 'The Lion Works', this area was finally redeveloped in the 1990s into today's Lion Retail Park.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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