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THIRSK , a market-See also: town in the Thirsk and See also: Malton See also: parliamentary division of the See also: North See also: Riding of See also: Yorkshire, See also: England, 22 M
.
N.W. by N. from See also: York by the North-Eastern railway
.
Pop
.
(1901) 3093
.
It lies in a fertile plain W. of the Hambleton Hills, on the Codbeck, a small tributary of the Swale
.
The See also: church of St Mary, entirely Perpendicular, with parvise, chancel,
See also: nave, aisles, porch, and tower 8o ft. in height, is one of the most beautiful churches in the Riding
.
The See also: original See also: work of See also: oak is especially noteworthy
.
The See also: moat of the See also: ancient See also: castle built by the Mowbrays about 98o remains
.
The principal• See also: modern buildings are the See also: assembly rooms, See also: mechanics' institute, and See also: court-See also: house
.
See also: Standing in the fertile See also: district of the Vale of Mowbray, the town has an extensive agricultural See also: trade
.
Agri-cultural implements are largely manufactured
.
Iron-founding, See also: engineering, tanning and brick-making are carried on, and there are large See also: flour-mills
.
At the See also: time of the Domesday Survey, Thirsk (Treske) was a See also: manor of little importance belonging partly to the See also: king and partly to Hugh, son of
See also: Baldric
.
Soon afterwards it was granted to Robert de Mowbray, who often resided there, and is said to have raised the castle round which the See also: borough See also: grew up
.
His estates, being forfeited for treason against See also: William Rufus, were restored by
See also: Henry I. to
See also: Nigel de Albini, Robert's See also: cousin, who took the name of Mowbray
.
See also: Roger, son of Nigel, took See also: part in the See also: rebellion against Henry II. in 1174, and although he was allowed to retain his estates, his castle at Thirsk was destroyed
.
The manor remained in his See also: family until the See also: death of See also: John de Mowbray, duke of
See also: Norfolk, without issue male in 1475, and after passing through several families was finally sold in 1723 to See also: Ralph See also: Bell, whose descendants thereafter held the manor
.
Thirsk is first mentioned as a borough in a charter granted by Roger de Mowbray to See also: Newburgh Priory in the reign of Henry II
.
It was governed by a See also: bailiff elected by the burgesses at the court leet of the See also: lord of the manor, and never received a charter of incorporation
.
The burgesses were represented in parliament by two members in 1295 and again from 1552–53 to 1832, when by the Municipal Reform See also: Act the number was reduced to one
.
In 1885 the town was disfranchised
.
Roger de Mowbray held a market by See also: prescription in Thirsk in the 13th century, and by See also: Camden's time (c
.
1586) it had become one of the best markets in the North Riding
.
It is still held by the lord of the manor
.
See See also: Victoria County See also: History: Yorkshire; William Grainge, The Vale of Mowbray: a See also: historical and topographical account of Thirsk and its neighbourhood (1859)
.
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