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HEXHAM , a marketSee also: town in the Hexham See also: parliamentary division of See also: Northumberland, See also: England, 21 M
.
W. from See also: Newcastle by the See also: Carlisle branch of the See also: North-Eastern railway, served also from Scotland by a branch of the North See also: British railway
.
Pop. of See also: urban See also: district (1901) 7107
.
It is pleasantly situated beneath the hills on the S. See also: bank of the See also: Tyne, and its market square and narrow streets bear many marks of antiquity
.
It is famous for its See also: great abbey See also: church of St Andrew
.
This
See also: building, as renovated in the 12th century, was to consist of See also: nave and transepts, choir and aisles, and massive central tower
.
The Scots are believed to have destroyed the nave in 1296, but it may be doubted if it was ever completed
.
In 1536 the last See also: prior was hanged for being concerned in the insurrection called the Pilgrimage of See also: Grace
.
The church as it stands is a See also: fine monument of Early See also: English See also: work, with Transitional details
.
Within, although it suffered much loss during a restoration c
.
1858, there are several See also: objects of See also: interest
.
Among these are a See also: Roman slab, carved with figures of a horseman trampling upon an enemy, several fine tombs and stones of the 13th and 14th centuries, the frith or fridstool of See also: stone, believed to be the
See also: original See also: bishop's See also: throne, and the fine Perpendicular roodscreen of See also: oak, retaining its loft
.
The crypt, discovered in 1726, isSee also: part of the Saxon church, and a note-worthy example of architecture of the See also: period
.
Its material is Roman, some of the stones having Roman inscriptions
.
These were brought from the Roman See also: settlement at See also: Corbridge, 4 M
.
E. of Hexham on the N. bank of the Tyne; for Hexham itself was not a Roman station
.
In 1832 a vessel containing about 8000 Saxon coins was discovered in the churchyard
.
Fragments of the monastic buildings remain, and west of the churchyard is the monks' See also: park, known as the See also: Seal, and now a See also: promenade, commanding beautiful views
.
In the town are two strong castellated towers of the 14th century, known as the See also: Moot See also: Hall and the
See also: Manor Office
.
Their names explain their use, but they were doubtless also intended as defensive See also: works
.
In the interesting and beautiful neighbourhood of Hexham there should be noticed Aydon See also: castle near Corbridge, a fortified See also: house of the See also: late 13th century; and Dilston or Dyvilston, a typical border fortress dating from Norman times, of which only a tower and small See also: chapel remain
.
It is replete with memories of the last See also: earl of See also: Derwentwater, who was beheaded in 1716 for his part in the See also: Stuart rising of the previous See also: year, and was buried in the chapel
.
There is an Elizabethan grammar school
.
Hexham and Newcastle See also: form a Roman Catholic bishopric, with the See also: cathedral at New-castle
.
There are manufactures of See also: leather gloves and other goods, and in the neighbourhood See also: barytes and See also: coal mines and extensive market gardens
.
The church and monastery at Hexham (Hextoldesham) were founded about 673 by See also: Wilfrid, archbishop of See also: York, who is said to have received a See also: grant of the whole of Hexhamshire from ~Ethelhryth,
See also: queen of Northumbria, and a grant of sanctuary in his
church from the See also: king
.
The church in 678 became the
See also: head of the new see of See also: Bernicia, which was See also: united to that of Lindisfarne about 821, when the bishop of Lindisfarne appears to have taken possession of the lordship which he and his successors held until it was restored to the archbishop of York by See also: Henry II
.
The archbishops appear to have had almost royal power throughout the liberty, including the rights of trying all pleas of the
See also: crown in their See also: court, of taking inquisitions and of See also: taxation
.
In 1545 the archbishop exchanged Hexhamshire with the king for other See also: property, and in 1572 all the See also: separate privileges which had belonged to him were taken away, and the liberty was annexed to the county of Northumberland
.
Hexham was a See also: borough by See also: prescription, and governed by a See also: bailiff at least as early as 1276, and the same form of See also: government continued until 1853
.
In 1343 the men of Hexham were accused of pretending to be Scots and imprisoning many See also: people of Northumberland and See also: Cumberland, killing some and extorting ransoms for others
.
The Lancastrians were defeated in 1464 near Hexham, and See also: legend says that it was in the woods round the town that Queen See also: Margaret and her son hid until their escape to See also: Flanders
.
In 1522 the bishop of Carlisle complained to See also: Cardinal See also: Wolsey, then archbishop of York, that the English thieves committed more thefts than " all the Scots of Scotland," the men of Hexham being worst of all, and appearing roo strong at the markets held in Hexham, so that the men whom they had robbed dared not complain or " say one word to them." This See also: state of affairs appears to have continued until the accession of See also: James I., and in 1595 the bailiff and constables of Hexham were removed as being " infected with combination and toleration of thieves." Hexham was at one
See also: time the market town of a large agricultural district
.
In 1227 a market on Monday and a See also: fair on the See also: vigil and See also: day of St See also: Luke the Evangelist were granted to the archbishop, and in 1320 Archbishop Melton obtained the right of holding two new fairs on the feasts of St James the Apostle lasting five days and of SS
.
See also: Simon and See also: Jude lasting six days
.
The market day was altered to Tuesday in 1662, and See also: Sir See also: William
See also: Fenwick, then See also: lord of the manor, received a grant of a cattle market on the Tuesday after the feast of St See also: Cuthbert in See also: March and every Tuesday fortnight until the feast of St
See also: Martin
.
The market rights were See also: purchased from Wentworth B
.
See also: Beaumont, lord of the manor, in 1886
.
During the 17th and 18th centuries Hexham was noted for the leather See also: trade, especially for the manufacture of gloves, but in the loth century the trade began to decline
.
Coal mines which had belonged to the archbishop, were sold to Sir See also: John Fenwick, Kt., in 1628
.
Hexham has never been represented in parliament, but gives its name to one of the four parliamentary divisions of the county
.
See
See also: Edward See also: Bateson and A
.
B
.
Hinds, A See also: History of Northumberland vol. iii
.
(1893–1896) ; A
.
B
.
See also: Wright, An Essay towards the History of Hexham (1823) ; James See also: Hewitt, A Handbook to Hexham and its Antiquities (1879)
.
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