Online Encyclopedia

CREDITON

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 392 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

CREDITON  , a

market
See also:
town in the South Molton
See also:
parliamentary division of Devonshire, England, 8 m . N.W. of Exeter by the
See also:
London & South-Western railway . Pop. of urban
See also:
district (1901) 3974 . It is situated in the narrow vale of the
See also:
river Creedy near its junction with the Exe, between two steep hills, and is divided into two parts, the east or old town and the west or new town . The church of
See also:
Holy
See also:
Cross, formerly collegiate, is a noble Perpendicular
See also:
building with Early
See also:
English and other early portions, and a
See also:
fine central tower . The grammar school, founded by
See also:
Edward VI. and refounded by Elizabeth, has exhibitions to Oxford and Cambridge
See also:
universities . Shoe-making, tanning, agricultural trade, tin-plating, and the manufacture of confectionery and cider have superseded the former large woollen and serge
See also:
industries . In 1897 Crediton was made the seat of a suffragan bishopric in the diocese of Exeter . The first indication of settlement at Crediton (Credington, Cryditon, Kirton) is the tradition that Winfrith or Boniface was born there in 680 . Perhaps in his memory (for the
See also:
great extent of the parish shows that it was thinly populated) it became in 909 the seat of the first bishopric in Devonshire . It was probably only a
See also:
village in 1049, when Leofric, bishop of Crediton, requested Leo IX. to transfer the see to Exeter, as Crediton was " an open town and much exposed to the incursions of pirates." At the Domesday Survey much of the
See also:
land was still uncultivated, but its prosperity increased, and in 1269 each of the twelve prebends of the collegiate church had a house and farmland within the parish . The bishops, to whom the
See also:
manor belonged until the Reformation, had difficulty in enforcing their warren and other rights; in 1351 Bishop Grandison obtained an exemplification of judgments of 1282 declaring that he had pleas of withernam, view of frank
See also:
pledge, the gallows and
See also:
assize of
See also:
bread and
See also:
ale .

Two years later there was a serious

riot against the increase of
See also:
copyhold . Perhaps it was at this time that the prescriptive borough of Crediton arose . The
See also:
jury of the borough are mentioned in 1275, and Crediton returned two members to parliament in 1306-1307, though never afterwards represented . A borough seal dated 1469 is extant, but the corporation is not mentioned in the grant made by Edward VI. of the church to twelve
See also:
principal inhabitants . The borough and manor were granted by Elizabeth to William Killigrew in 1595, but there is no indication of town organization then or in 1630, and in the 18th century Crediton was governed by commissioners . In 1231 the bishop obtained a
See also:
fair, still held, on the vigil, feast and morrow of St Lawrence . This was important as the wool trade was established by 1249 and certainly continued until 163o, when the market for kersies is mentioned in conjunction with a saying " as fine as Kirton spinning." See Rev . Preb . Smith, " Early
See also:
History of Credition," in Devonshire Association for the
See also:
Advancement of Science, Literature and
See also:
Art, Transactions, vol. xiv . (Plymouth, 1882) ; Richard J . King, " The Church of St Mary and of the Holy Cross, Credition," in Exeter Diocesan Architectural Society, Transactions, vol. iv . (Exeter, 1878) .

End of Article: CREDITON
[back]
CREDIT MOBILIER OF AMERICA
[next]
CARL FRIEDRICH HEINRICH CREDNER (1809-1876)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.