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RIDINGS are the three districts into which from See also: ancient times See also: Yorkshire has been divided for administrative purposes
.
Formerly there were similar districts in See also: Lindsey in See also: Lincolnshire
.
The word See also: riding was originally written as thrithing or thriding, but the initial th has been absorbed in the final th or t of the words See also: north, See also: south, See also: east and west, by which it was normally preceded
.
Ridings are Scandinavian institutions, In See also: Iceland the third See also: part of a thing which corresponds roughly to an See also: English county was called thrithjungr; in See also: Norway, however, the thrithjungr seems to have been an ecclesiastical division
.
According to the 12th-century compilation known as the " See also: laws of See also: Edward the See also: Confessor," the riding was the third part of a county (provincia); to it causes were brought which could not be determined in the See also: wapentake, and a See also: matter which could not be determined in the riding was brought into the See also: court of the See also: shire
.
There is abundant evidence that riding courts were held after the Norman See also: Conquest
.
A charter which See also: Henry I. granted to the
See also: Church of St
See also: Peter's at See also: York mentions wapentacmot, tridingmot and shiresmot, and exemptions from suit to the thriding or riding may be noticed frequently in the charters of the Norman See also: kings
.
As yet, however, the jurisdiction and functions of these courts have not been ascertained
.
It seems probable from the silence of the records that they had already fallen into disuse early in the 13th century
.
Each of the ridings of Yorkshire has its own See also: lord See also: lieutenant and commission of the See also: peace, and under the See also: Local See also: Government See also: Act of 1883 forms a See also: separate administrative county
.
They are distinguished as the north, east and west ridings, but the ancient
divisions of Lindsey were known as the north, south and west ridings respectively
.
See
.
Felix See also: Liebermann, Die Gesetze der Angelsachsen (See also: Halle, 1888-89); See also: William Stubbs, Constitutional
See also: History of See also: England; See also: Richard Cleasby, Icelandic See also: Dictionary; New English Dictionary; and William See also: Dugdale, Monasticon Anglicanum, vol. vi., edited by See also: John Caley and others (1846)
.
(G
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