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BEVERLEY , a marketSee also: town and municipal See also: borough in the Holderness See also: parliamentary division of the See also: East See also: Riding of See also: York-See also: shire, See also: England, 8 m
.
N.N.W. of See also: Hull by a branch of the See also: North-Eastern railway
.
Pop
.
(1901) 13,183
.
It lies in a level country east of the See also: line of slight elevations known as the Wolds, near the See also: river Hull, and has communication by canal with Hull
.
The See also: church of St
See also: John the Evangelist, commonly called Beverley Minster, is a magnificent
See also: building, exceeding in See also: size and splendour some of the See also: English cathedrals
.
A monastery was founded here by John of Beverley (c
.
64o-721), a native of the East Riding, who was See also: bishop successively of See also: Hexham and of York, and was canonized in 1037
.
A See also: college of secular canons followed in the loth century, the provostship of which subsequently became an office of high dignity, and was held by See also: Thomas
See also: Becket, afterwards archbishop of See also: Canterbury
.
Of the existing building, the easternmost See also: bay of the See also: nave, the transepts with east and west aisles, the choir with aisles and See also: short transepts, and the Lady See also: chapel, are Early English, a superb example of the finest development of that See also: style
.
The See also: remainder of the nave is Decorated, excepting the westernmost bay which is Perpendicular, as is the ornate west front with its graceful flanking towers
.
The north porch is also a beautiful example of this style
.
The most noteworthy details within the church are the exquisite Early English See also: staircase which led to the chapter See also: house (no longer remaining), and the Percy See also: tomb, a remarkable example of Decorated See also: work, commemorating Eleanor, wife of See also: Henry Percy (d
.
1328)
.
The church of St Mary is a cruciform building with central tower, almost entirely of Decorated and Perpendicular work
.
Though overshadowed by the presence of the minster, it is yet a very
See also: fine example of its styles, its most noteworthy features being the tower and the west front
.
Bever-ley was walled, and one See also: gate of the 15th century remains; there are also some picturesque old houses
.
The See also: industries are tanning, iron-founding, See also: brewing and the manufacture of chemicals; and there is a large agricultural See also: trade
.
Beverley is the seat of a suffragan bishop in the diocese of York
.
The municipal borough is under a mayor, 6 aldermen and 18 councillors, and has an See also: area of 2404 acres, including a large extent of See also: common pasture See also: land
.
Beverley (Beverlac) is said to be on the site of a See also: British See also: settlement
.
Evidently a church had existed there before 704, since in that See also: year it was restored by St John of Beverley, who also founded a monastery there and was himself buried in the church
.
In the devastation of the north of England which followed the See also: Conquest, Beverley is said to have escaped by a miracle attributed to St John; the Norman See also: leader, while about to enter and pillage the church, See also: fell from his See also: horse dead, and the See also: king, thinking this a sign that the town was under the
See also: protection of heaven, exempted it from pillage
.
From the See also: time of St John of Beverley until the dissolution of the monasteries, the See also: manor and town of Beverley belonged to the archbishopric of York, and is said to have been held under a charter of liberties supposed to have been granted by King IEthelstan in 925
.
This charter, besides other privileges, is said to have granted sanctuary in Beverley, and the ' lcuga" over which thisSee also: privilege extended was afterwards shown to include the whole town
.
Confirmations of 4Ethelstan's charter were granted by See also: Edward the See also: Confessor and other succeeding See also: kings
.
In the reign of Henry I., See also: Thurstan, See also: arch-bishop of York, gave the burgesses their first charter, which is one of the earliest granted to any town in England
.
In it he granted them the same privileges as the citizens of York, among these beinga gild See also: merchant and freedom from See also: toll throughout the whole of See also: Yorkshire, with right to take it at all the markets and fairs in their town except at the three See also: principal fairs, the toll of which belonged to the archbishop
.
In 1200 King John granted the town a new charter, for which the burgesses had to pay 500 marks
.
Other charters generally confirming the first were granted to the town by most of the early kings
.
The incorporation charter granted by See also: Queen See also: Elizabeth in 1573 was confirmed by
See also: Charles I. in 1629 and Charles II. in 1663, and renewed by
See also: James II. on his accession
.
Parliamentary
See also: representation by two members began in the reign of Edward I., but lapsed, until the corporation charter of 1573, from which date it continued until the Reform See also: Act of 1867
.
In 1554–1555 Queen Mary granted the three fairs on the feasts of St John the Confessor, the See also: Translation of St John and the Nativity of St John the Baptist, together with the weekly markets on Wednesday and Saturday, which had been held by the archbishops of York by traditional See also: grant of Edward the Confessor to the burgesses of the town
.
See also: Cloth-See also: weaving was one of the chief industries of Beverley; it is mentioned and appears to have been important as early as 1315
.
See See also: Victoria County History—Yorkshire; G
.
Poulson, Beverlac; Antiquities and See also: History of Beverley and of the Provostry, &'c., of St John's (2 vols., 1829) ; G
.
Oliver, D . D., History and Antiquities of Beverley, &'c . (1829) . |
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