ALONG
THE HUMBER
The wide River
Humber forms the southern boundary of East Yorkshire and separates
Yorkshire from Lincolnshire. It is the most obvious dividing line
between the North of England and the Midlands. Humber is a Celtic
river name meaning 'good- well' and the root of the name can be traced
back to the Sanskrit 'Ambhas' meaning water. The antiquity of the
name demonstrates the river's importance. The Humber gave its name
to the ancient kingdom of Northumbria - the land north of the Humber
and it forms one of the largest river estuaries in England, matched
only by the River Severn and the River Thames.
The Humber is
formed by the confluence of Yorkshire's River Ouse with the River
Trent from the midlands near Faxfleet, about six miles east of the
port of Goole. Almost every single river in
Yorkshire (exceptions being the Esk, Ribble and Tees) feed the River
Humber via the River Ouse. A few miles further east, along the Humber
from Faxfleet is Brough where the Roman road from York linked
up with a Roman ferry across the Humber towards Lincolnshire.
Brough was known
to the Romans as Petuaria and was probably the tribal capital of the
Parisi. The Parisi were the great Celtic or ancient British tribe
of east Yorkshire. They were culturally more sophisticated than the
Brigantes tribe (See Aldborough) who inhabited
the rest of Yorkshire and they may have had links with a Celtic tribe
in Europe called Parisi who gave their name to Paris in France.
A few miles further
east of Brough is Hessle on the outskirts of Hull, where the
magnificent Humber Bridge crosses the River Humber. The bridge,
one of the world's longest single span suspension bridges (4,626 feet)
was commenced in 1972 and opened in 1981. It links Hessle with Barton
upon Humber in Lincolnshire.
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HULL
Hull is located
at the point where the River Hull (it starts in the Yorkshire Wolds)
joins the River Humber, twenty miles from the sea. Hull, with a population
of 300,000 is the third biggest port in England after Liverpool and
London and is sometimes described as 'the Biggest fishing port in
the world'. During World War Two Hull suffred some of Britain's heaviest
wartime bombing and many new buildings were later constructed to replace
the wartime damage. There are important ferry links to Zeebrugge and
Rotterdam in Europe from Hull.
Hull was originally
a little settlement called Wyke which belonged to the Cistercian
abbey of Meaux near Beverley. In 1293 King Edward I purchased Wyke
from the abbot of Meaux and built a town here which he renamed Kingston-upon-Hull.
Today the name Kingston-upon-Hull is now more of an historic name
and the place is known more commonly as Hull. King Edward had recognised
Hull's potential importance as the site for a harbour and as a war
base. In 1299 the King granted the town its first charter.
The harbour at
Hull was developed by a merchant family called the De La Poles who
abandoned an earlier haven development at Hedon to the east
of Hull. Sir William De La Pole became Hull's first mayor in 1331.
William's son Michael also became Mayor of Hull and later founded
a Carthusian priory in the town.
Hull's strategic
importance was recognised centuries after the reign of King Edward
when in the English Civil War Hull was the first place to be openly
hostile to King Charles I. The King was on his way to Hull from Beverley
in in 1642 when the gates of the town wall were closed to him by the
Governor of Hull called Sir John Holtham. The Parliamentarians had
persuaded Holtham to side with them during a meeting at a house in
Hull's Silver Street. The building where the mneeting was held was
Sir John's House - later to become the White Hart Inn.
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THE
OLD TOWN OF HULL
Medieval Hull
was located west of the River Hull and on the north side of the Humber.
It was bordered on its western flank by a moat served to protect this
important war base from attack. This area of town is known as the
Old Town. Here many of the streets and narrow alleys have medieval
origins. The moat on the western side of the old town later became
the site of Hull's Queens docks, which were built in 1778. Some of
the docks were later filled in and became Queens Gardens.
Old streets in
the 'Old Town' include Silver Street, Manor Street, Posterngate, Black
Friar Gate, High Street and the Market Place. The most notable feature
of medeival times is the church of Holy Trinity which dates
from the fourteenth century. The church is notable for incorporating
some of the earliest uses of brick. A brickyard was recorded in Hull
as early as 1303 and it seems that the popularity of brick as a building
material may have spread across the country from Hull. Inside the
church we can see an effigy of William De La Pole, Hull's first mayor
who died in 1366. The church of Holy Trinity underwent restoration
in 1869.
The High Street
in Hull was once the most important street in the town and is the
home to Wilberforce House which was the birthplace of the anti-slavery
campaigner William Wilberforce (1759-1833). Wilberforce was
elected as a Member of Parliament at the age of twenty-one and later
became known as 'The Nightingale of the House of Commons' because
of his campaigning work. Wilberforce was the leading figure in the
campaign to abolish the slave trade and his work resulted in The Abolition
Act of 1833 which abolished slavery throughout the British Empire.
Wilberforce House is now a museum dedicated to the history of the
slave trade.
Cottingham
lies on the northern outskirts of Hull and was once a separate town.
It was granted a weekly market in 1199 and an annual fair in 1200.
The parish church dates from the fourteenth century.
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BEVERLEY
Beverley was once
the capital of the East Riding of Yorkshire and is the home to Beverley
Minster, regarded as one of the most beautiful churches in England.
In its architectural stature it is more of a cathedral than a church
and indeed many English cathedrals are overshadowed by Beverley. The
first church, with an attached monastery was built at Beverley in
the 7th century by St John of Beverley who had trained under
St Hilda at Whitby. In 687 AD he became the
Bishop of Hexham and later the Bishop of
York.
John later returned
to Beverley, where he retired and he was buried in his church. Later
the Danes almost destroyed the church but it was rebuilt and visited
by King Athelstan in the tenth century, sometime before a great battle
with the Vikings. Pilgrims continued to flock to John's shrine and
in 1037 he was canonized as a saint. In 1138 the saint's banner was
carried with the standards of other famous northern saints at the
Battle of the Standard near Northallerton.
Sometime after
the Norman conquest the church was refashioned by the Normans, but
their new building was destroyed by fire in 1188. Around 1220 rebuilding
of a new minster church began and work continued until around 1420
culminating in the magnificent church of today.
Inside the minster
is an elaborate shrine to the Percy family (See also Alnwick)
which was constructed in the fourteenth century. Nearby is a Frid
Stool or peace stool, a primitive seat of Anglo-Saxon origin which
is similar to one found at Hexham Abbey.
The stool offered sanctuary to criminals similar to the sanctuary
offered at Durham Cathedral. Beverley's
organ is a Snetzer organ, one of the best surviving examples, dating
from 1767.
The town of Beverley
grew up around the minster church and received its first charter in
1129. Beverley was incorporated as a borough in 1573 during the reign
of Elizabeth I. As well as the minster there are a number of other
historic features in Beverley worthy of note. The beautiful parish
church of St Mary's, dating from the 12th century predates
the minster and is famous for a carving of a rabbit which is said
to have inspired Lewis Carroll to create the March Hare in Alice in
Wonderland. Most of Beverley's town centre is Georgian and Victorian
but at the northern entrance to the town is the medieval North Bar.
It was one of five gateways protecting the entrance to the town and
was supported by a drawbridge, as Beverley was surrounded by a defensive
ditch. Beverley's Market Place is the home of a Saturday market
and has a market cross dating from 1714, which is supported with 8
columns. Horse racing has been held in Beverley since 1690.
Meaux,
a few miles to the east of Bevreley was the site of Meaux Abbey, founded
by the Earl of Albermarle in the 12th century. Virtually nothing remains
of the site. At one time the abbey owned the land that would later
become the town and city of Hull.

Old postcard
showing Beverley Minster
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DRIFFIELD
AND THE YORKSHIRE WOLDS
The Yorkshire
Wolds are formed by the most northerly limits of chalk in Britain
and form rolling hills to the south of the Vale
of Pickering and north of the low lying East Yorkshire district
called Holderness. The Wolds were attractive
to ancient man, who preferred to stay clear of the poorly drained
and often flooded neighbouring vales. Many Bronze Age burials and
other finds have been discovered in the neighbourhood.
The little town
of Great Driffield lies just on the edge of the Wolds and is
sometimes known as the 'Capital of the Wolds'. Great Driffield is
an agricultural settlement and is located at the point where the River
Hull begins. The River Hull is formed by several streams flowing down
from the Yorkshire Wolds and many of these streams are noted for their
Trout. An eighteenth century canal (1772) links Great Driffield to
a more navigable section of the River Hull further downstream. The
River Hull flows south to the east of Beverley
before joining the River Humber at the City of Hull.
Great Driffield's most notable historic feature is the church of All
Saints. It was first built around 1200 but was much restored by Gilbert
Soctt. The church tower is fifteenth century.
Little Driffield,
with its village green, lies a mile to the west of Great
Driffield. It is reputedly the burial place of Aldred, King of Northumbria
,who died near hear in 705 while fighting in battle against the Vikings.
A Saxon monastery is said to have existed sometime during or after
Aldred's reign.
Wetwang
, five miles west of Little Driffield is an inriguing place name.
It could mean the 'Wet field'. The second part of the name almost
certainly means field as it derives from the Viking word vangr and
early forms of the village name are Wetwangha, Wetwanghe, Wetwange
and Wetwong. Some place name scholars argue that the place was actually
a Viking name 'Vaettvangrr' meaning the field of summons for the trial
of an action. Their argument is that local tradition claims that the
fields hereabouts are not noted for being wet, although field drainage
could have been improved since Viking times. Driffield could of course
mean 'Dry Field' although early forms of the name point to the name
meaning 'dirt field' or 'field with stubble'.
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BRIDLINGTON
The coastal boundary
between East Yorkshire and North Yorkshire lies just to the north
of Flamborough
Head and just to the south of Filey
in North Yorkshire (although Filey was traditionally in the East Riding
of Yorkshire). Flamborough
Head is covered in the Scarborough
section.
The famous coastal
resort of Bridlington, just to the south of Flamborough Head,
began as a an Anglo-Saxon settlement, with a name that meant Beohrtel's
ton - the farm belonging to Beohrtel. Nearby is a place called Sewerby
- a Viking place name - its name means Siward's farm or village.
Bridlington is
a coastal market town and its most important historic feature is Bridlington
Priory. The priory was founded in 1120 for Augustinian canons
by Walter de Gant but of the present remains, nothing dates before
the 13th century. Bridlington Priory was largely destroyed during
the Dissolution of the Monasteries and its last Prior, William Wode
was executed at Tyburn for his part in the Pilgrimage of Grace. The
church of the priory, dedicated to St Mary remains in full, escaping
the destruction that followed the Dissolution of the Monasteries,
because it was the Parish church of Bridlington. Some of the stones
from the old priory were used in the construction of Bridlington's
piers.
One of the best
known characters associated with the priory was John of Bridlington,
who was born at Thwing, a few miles to the north west in 1362. He
was famed for working miracles and after his death in 1401 was made
a saint by the Pope.
During the Civil
War, Bridlington was used as a landing place by Queen Henrietta, Charles
I's queen. She landed at Bridlington on February 22nd 1643 to escape
the canon fire of Parliamentarian ships.
It was only fourteen
years later that a Quaker called Robert Fowler set sail from Bridlington
to America with eleven Quakers and with absolutely no experience of
sailing. Remarkably they landed safely in America only a few miles
from their intended destination. In the following century Bridlington
was under attack from the Anericans, when the Privateer John Paul
Jones was engaged in a sea battle in which his ship was sunk just
off the Bridlington coast. Jones escaped !. John had also launched
attacks at Alnmouth
Northumberland and at Skinningrove further up the Yorkshire coast.
Notable houses
in the neighbourhood of Bridlington include the Elizabethan Burton
Agnes Hall which was built in 1598 six miles west of Bridlington
. Burton means the farm on the burgh or fortified manor. Agnes
is Agnes de Albermarle who witnessed a deed at Burton Agnes in 1175.
Sewerby Hall with its gardens is a 19th century parkland hall
just to the north of Bridlington.
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HOLDERNESS
Holderness is
the name given to the coastal stretch of east Yorkshire stretching
from Flamborough
Head to Spurn Head at the mouth of the Humber. The district forms
a huge marshy peninsula about thirty miles long and is bordered by
the River Hull in the west, the River Humber in the south and the
North Sea in the east. The name is Viking and means the headland (ness)
of the hold. A hold was a man of high rank in the area of Northern
England where the Danes ruled called the Danelaw.
The Holderness
coast is prone to erosion and a number of villages that existed at
the the time of the Domesday Book have since been washed away. Holderness
villages like Barmston, Ulrome and Skipsea just to the south
of Bridlington were once much further from the sea than they are today.
Skipsea
may have been the site of the Viking administrative capital of Holderness.
It was later the site of the castle built by Drogo, who was
thought to be a Flemish adventurer who fought at the Battle of Hastings.
His castle was destroyed in the reign of King Henry III. Skipsea is
a Viking name and means 'Ship Lake' - a lake on which ships could
sail. The lake was perhaps an outlet to the sea which has long since
been eroded away. A few miles inland is North Frodingham, once
the home to the Anglo-Saxon settlers called the Froddings who may
have been the descendants of Froda, an Anglo-Saxon mentioned in the
poem Beowulf.
A few miles further
south we reach the village of Atwick and inland Nunkeeling,
the site of a 12th century Benedictine monastery. Two miles further
down the coast we reach the small town of Hornsea
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HORNSEA
Hornsea's
name means the 'horn-shaped lake' - the lake in question being Hornsea
Mere, a freshwater lake less than a mile from the sea. It is remarkable,
in that despite being only 467 acres, it is actually Yorkshire's largest
natural lake although some man-made reservoirs up in the dales are
considerably larger. In the thireteenh century, the abbot of St Mary's,
York and the abbot of Meaux near Beverley disputed the fishing rights
of Hornsea Mere. They eventually settled their argument in a duel
employing champions to fight their cause. St Mary's were the eventual
winners, although it is said that no blood was shed during the dispute.
The main street
of Hornsea is called Newbegin and there is a museum dedicated to life
in Holderness. Nearby is a shopping and leisure park called Hornsea
Freeport and to the south of Hornsea the Hornsea Pottery which produces
quality pottery. Hornsea's church dedicated to St Nicholas was built
of cobblestones in the 14th century.
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SOUTH
HOLDERNESS
About 5 miles
down the sandy Holderness coast from Hornsea is Aldbrough village
situated inland with a name that means old manor or old settlement
- suggesting a site of some antiquity. Further inland towards Beverley
and Hull are Skirlaugh and Burton Constable
Skirlaugh
was the birthplace of the foureenth century Prince
Bishop of Durham, Walter Skirlaw, who took his name from the place.
The Bishop built the church at Skirlaw in 1401. Skirlaw had also been
Bishop of Lichfield and Bishop of Wells. During his time as Bishop
of Durham he built Yarm Bridge, linking the
counties of Durham and Yorkshire.
Burton Constable
(not to be confused with Constable Burton in Wensleydale)
is the home of Burton Constable Hall. Parts of this house date
back to 1570, but most of the building is eighteenth century. It is
the home of the Chichester -Constable family whose ancestors have
lived in the area since the 11th century.
A few miles south
of Burton Constable is Hedon. In the 12th century this was
a busy port situated on a stream that flows into the Humber. Its role
as a port was later eclipsed by Hull. The medieval
De La Pole family who developed Hull as a port originally concentrated
their trade at Hedon. There are still some traces of Hedon's former
importance. In the Town Hall there is an old mace which is said to
be the oldest in England. It dates from the reign of Henry V. Hedon's
church is dedicated to St Augustine and was commenced in 1180, but
the nave and aisles are 14th century.
Patrington,
further south has a fine cathedral-like medieval church sometimes
described as the 'Queen of Holderness and further north east on the
coast is Withernsea, historically a coastal resort for Hull.
It has a lighthouse dating from 1894.
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SPURN
HEAD AND THE HUMBER MOUTH
South of Withernsea
and Patringtton, the Holderness peninsula begins to narrow until it
eventually forms the tiny spit of sand and shingle called Spurn
Head where the River Humber, finally becomes the sea. Spurn
Head is a hook shaped peninsula, some three and a half miles long
and is as little as 50 yards wide in places. Formed by silt deposited
from the Humber and sand washed down from the Holderness coast, Spurn
Head is subject to erosion from the sea. It has occasionally been
breached by the sea, but deposits rebuild and Spurn Head can reappear
a little further to the west. The Humber lifeboat is based at a jetty
on Spurn Head, as are the Humber pilot ships which guide big ships
into the mouth of the Humber.
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MARKET
WEIGHTON AND POCKLINGTON
Market Weighton
and Pocklington are market towns situated near the edge of the Wolds
between Hull and York.
A Roman Road from York to Brough
on the Humber runs through the market town of Market Weighton. The
churchyard here is the burial place of a giant called Wiiliam Bradley
who died in 1820. He was eight foot tall and weighed 27 stones.
Pocklington
has a 13th century church and a grammar school dating from 1514 which
was attended by William Wilberforce (See Hull).
William's ancestors came from the village of Wilberfoss a few
miles to the west of Pocklington on the road to York.
GOODMANHAM
- PAGANS AND CHRISTIANS
The Market Weighton
and Pocklington area is thought to have been the first area of Northern
England to be colonised by the Anglo-Saxons from Denmark and Germany
(the Angles came from Angulus in southern Denmark).
The Anglo-Saxons
formed the Kingdom of Deira in the Yorkshire Wolds and this kingdom
gradually spread north and west , ultimately meging with the Anglo-Saxon
Kingdom of Bernicia north of the Tees to form the Kingdom of Northumbria
(See historical chronicle). Deira probably
took its name from the River Derwent valley which lies to the northern
and western outskirts of the East Yorkshire region.
The medieval church
of All Saints at Goodmanham, just to the north of Market Weighton,
is thought to have been the site of the principal pagan temple of
the Anglo-Saxon kingdom called Deira. In the Easter of 627 Edwin of
Deira, the King of Northumbria was converted to Christianity by a
missionary called St Paulinus and he undertook his baptism at a church
called St Peter - a predecessor of York Minster.
Coifi the Pagan
high priest of Deira followed Edwin's example and also converted to
Christianity. To demonstrate his new faith Coifi destroyed the great
heathen temple at Goodmanham, borrowing Edwin's arms and horse to
destroy the site (See historical chronicle).
King Edwin is
said to have owned a summer palace somewhere near Goodmanham
from where Coifi rode out to destroy the pagan shrine at Goodmanham.
It is known that in the year 626, a year before his conversion to
Christianity, there was an attempt to assasinate Edwin at this palace.
Eumer, an agent of the King of the West Saxons attempted to assasinate
Edwin while he was celebrating the Pagan festival of Easter. The assasin
entered the King's court and asked to speak with the king on the pretence
of having an important message from the West Saxon King. On seeing
the king, Eumer produced a poisoned dagger from beneath his cloak
with which he attempted to stab Edwin. Fortunately one of Edwin's
men Lillam jumped in the way and suffered a blow from which he was
killed. A fight followed in which Edwin was injured but Eumer was
eventually put to death. On the same night of the assasination attempt
King Edwin's queen, Ethelburga gave birth.
The site of Edwin's
palace is however unknown, the two most likely locations being at
Sancton to the south of Market Weighton, where a large Anglo-Saxon
cemetery has been found or at Londesborough near Pocklington. In 634
the palace was destroyed by the Welsh King Cadwallon of Gwynedd. It
may later have been replaced by a new palace at Newbald, south
of Sancton as Newbald means new building. Newbald formed a large estate
in later medieval times and this may have been associated with the
site of the palace.
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