Online Encyclopedia

BOROUGHBRIDGE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 273 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BOROUGHBRIDGE  , a

market
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town in the Ripon
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parliamentary division of the West
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Riding of
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Yorkshire, England; 22 M . N.W. of York on a branch of the North Eastern railway . Pop . (1901) 83o . It lies in the central plain of Yorkshire, on the
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river Ure near its confluence with the Swale . It is in the parish of
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Aldborough, the
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village of that name (q.v.), celebrated for its
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Roman remains, lying a mile south-east . About
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half a mile to the west of Boroughbridge there are three upright stones called the Devil's Arrows, which are of uncertain origin but probably of the
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Celtic period . The
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manor of Borough-
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bridge, then called Burc, was held by
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Edward the
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Confessor and passed to William the Conqueror, but suffered so much from the ravages of his soldiers that by 1o86 it had decreased in value from £ro to 55s . When the site of the
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Great North Road was altered, towards the end of the 11th century, a bridge was built across the Ure, about half a mile above the Roman bridge at Aldborough, and called Burgh bridge or Ponteburgem . This caused a village to spring up, and it afterwards increased so much as to become a market town . In 1229 Boroughbridge, as
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part of the manor of Aldborough, was granted to Hubert de Burgh, but was forfeited a few years later by his son who fought against the king at
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Evesham . It then remained a royal manor until Charles I. granted it to several citizens of
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London, from whom it passed through numerous hands to the
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present owner .

The

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history of Boroughbridge during the early 14th century centres round the war with Scotland, and culminates with the
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battle fought there in 1321 . When in 1317 the Scots invaded England, they penetrated as far south as Borough-bridge and burnt the town . Boroughbridge was evidently a borough by
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prescription, and as such was called upon to return two members to parliament in 1299 . It was not represented again until 1553, when the
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privilege was revived . The town was finally disfranchised in 1832 . In 1504 the
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bailiff and inhabitants of Boroughbridge received a grant of two fairs, and Charles II. in 167o created three new fairs in the borough, on the 12th of
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June, the 5th of August and the 12th of
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October, and leased them to Francis Calvert and Thomas Wilkinson for ninety-nine years .

End of Article: BOROUGHBRIDGE
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