York
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- This article is about the historic English city. For other meanings, see York (disambiguation).
City of York | |
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Image:EnglandYork.png | |
Geography | |
Status: | Unitary, City |
Region: | Yorkshire and the Humber |
Ceremonial County: | North Yorkshire |
Traditional County: | Yorkshire |
Area: - Total | Ranked 166th 271.94 km² |
Admin. HQ: | York |
ONS code: | 00FF |
Demographics | |
Population: - Total (2004 est.) - Density | Ranked 76th 184,900 680 / km² |
Ethnicity: | 97.8% White |
Politics | |
York City Council http://www.york.gov.uk/ | |
Leadership: | Leader & Cabinet |
Executive: | Liberal Democrats |
MPs: | Hugh Bayley (City of York), John Greenway (Ryedale), John Grogan (Selby), Anne McIntosh (Vale of York) |
York is a city in northern England, at the confluence of the Rivers Ouse and Foss. The York urban area has a population of 137,505 whilst the entire unitary authority (see below) has a population of 184,900. Its geographic coordinates are Template:Coor dm.
York is the traditional county town of Yorkshire, to which it lends its name. However, it did not form part of any of the three ridings of Yorkshire. The modern City of York, created on April 1, 1996, is a unitary authority — as well as York itself, this includes a number of neighbouring parishes which formerly belonged to the surrounding districts of Harrogate, Ryedale and Selby. It borders on North Yorkshire and the East Riding of Yorkshire.
The city was founded in AD 71, and has a rich Roman and Viking history. The historical aspects of York attract a great deal of tourism. York is home to the University of York.
The city sometimes suffers from flooding.
Contents |
History and tourism
York is renowned for its history, which is preserved in its architecture. The city was founded during the reign of Roman Emperor Vespasian in AD 71, and for much of the intervening period has been the principal city of Northern England. Every year, thousands of tourists flock to see the surviving mediaeval buildings, interspersed with Roman and Viking remains. The City Council has 34 Conservation Areas, 2,084 Listed buildings and 22 Scheduled Ancient Monuments in its care.
Roman York
For the Romans, York, or Eboracum, was a major military base; Emperor Septimius Severus died there in AD 211, and Constantius Chlorus, the father of Constantine I, died there in 306. York is also the city in which Constantine's troops proclaimed him emperor.
Substantial remains of the headquarters building of the Roman legionary fortress were discovered under the Minster, and they are open to the public. A re-erected Roman column now stands on nearby Deangate, where there is also a recent statue of Constantine. Other sites of excavated remains include a Roman bath, located under the Roman Bath pub in St Sampson's Square, a Roman temple, near the foot of Lendal Bridge, and the site of a Roman bridge over the River Ouse. Some remains of the Roman city walls can be seen between Monk Bar and the Merchant Taylors' Hall, and a more substantial section can be seen between Museum Gardens and the Central Library, together with the late Roman Multangular Tower. Outside the city walls are the remains of substantial Roman cemeteries. A large number of Roman finds are now housed in the Yorkshire Museum.
Saxon and Viking York
- For Viking York, see Jórvík.
Anglian York was firstly capital of Deira, before shifting to control of a united kingdom and later earldom of Northumbria. Paulinus of York brought Christianity to the region in the early 7th century with the conversion of King Edwin of Northumbria and the first Minster is believed to have been built in 627, although the location of the early Minster is a matter of dispute. York became a centre of learning, its most famous scholar being Alcuin.
A "great Viking army" captured York in AD 866, and in 876 the Vikings settled permanently in parts of the Yorkshire countryside. Viking kings ruled this area, known to historians as "The Viking Kingdom of Jorvik", for almost a century. In 954 the last Viking king, Eric Bloodaxe, was expelled and his kingdom was incorporated in the newly consolidated Anglo-Saxon state. Another renowned scholar of this era was Wulfstan II, Archbishop of York.
Medieval York
Image:York Minster close.jpg Following the Norman Conquest of 1066, York was substantially damaged by the punitive harrying of the north (1069) launched by William the Conqueror in response to regional revolt. Two castles were erected in the city on either side of the River Ouse. In time York became an important urban centre as the administrative centre of the county of Yorkshire, as the seat of an archbishop, and at times in the later 13th and 14th century as an alternative seat of royal government. It was an important trading centre. Several religious houses were founded following the Conquest, including St Mary's Abbey and Holy Trinity Priory. The city as a possession of the crown also came to house a substantial Jewish community under the protection of the sheriff.
On March 16, 1190 a mob of townsfolk forced the Jews in York to flee into Clifford's Tower, which was under the control of the sheriff. The castle was set on fire and the Jews were massacred. It is likely that various local magnates who were indebted to the Jews helped instigate this massacre or, at least, did nothing to prevent it. It came during a time of widespread attacks against Jews in Britain. Commemoration of the York massacre passed into the Jewish liturgy and until 1990 Orthodox Judaism forbade Jews from living within the city.
York prospered during much of the later mediaeval era and this is reflected in the built environment. York Minster is the largest mediaeval cathedral in England and one of the largest gothic churches in Europe. The city still boasts nineteen mediaeval parish churches, eight of which are regularly used for worship. The mediaeval city walls, with their entrance gates, known as bars, encompassed virtually the entire city and survive to this day. The city was also designated as a county corporate, giving it effective county status.
Image:York Shambles.jpg The later years of the 14th and the earlier years of the 15th centuries were characterised by particular prosperity. It is in this period that the regular cycle of religious pageants (or plays) associated with the Corpus Christi cycle and performed by the various craft guilds grew up. Among the more important personages associated with this period was Nicholas Blackburn senior, Lord Mayor in 1412 and a leading merchant. He is depicted in glass in the (now) east window of All Saints' Church in North Street. The period from the later 15th century seems to have witnessed economic contraction and a dwindling in York's regional importance. The construction of the city's new Guildhall around the middle of the century can be seen as an attempt to project civic confidence in the face of growing uncertainty.
Dating from the later mediaeval era, and now a popular tourist attraction, is the Shambles, an old street of timber-framed shops originally occupied by butchers. Some retain the outdoor shelves and the hooks on which meat was displayed. They have overhanging upper floors and are now largely souvenir shops.
Early modern York
Few buildings of significance were put up in the century after the completion of the Minster in 1472, the exceptions being the completion of the King's Manor (which from 1537 to 1641 housed the Council of the North) and the rebuilding of the church of St Michael-le-Belfry, where Guy Fawkes was baptised in 1570. In 1547, fifteen parish churches were closed, reducing their number from forty to twenty-five - a reflection of the decline in the city's population.
17th-century York
Following his break with Parliament, King Charles I established his Court in York in 1642 for six months. Subsequently, during the English Civil War, the city was regarded as a Royalist stronghold and was besieged and eventually captured by Parliamentary forces under Lord Fairfax in 1644. After the war, York slowly regained its former pre-eminence in the North, and by 1660 was the third-largest city in England after London and Norwich.
18th-century York
York elected two members to the Unreformed House of Commons.
On 22 March 1739 the infamous highwayman Dick Turpin was convicted at York assizes of horse-stealing, and was hanged at the Knavesmire on 7 April 1739. Turpin is buried in St George's churchyard, York, where his tombstone also shows his alias, John Palmer.
Modern York
York is best-known as a tourist destination and, as well, is home to numerous Ghost Walks and a favourite venue for hen parties. But modern York is also a centre of communications, education and manufacturing. It is a major railway junction, situated on the East Coast, Cross Country and Transpennine mainlines.
York is also a major venue for horse racing at York Racecourse in the Knavesmire area.
York is the headquarters of the confectionery manufacturer Nestlé Rowntree, and home to the KitKat, Smarties and eponymous Yorkie bar chocolate brands. Terry's chocolate factory, makers of the Chocolate Orange, was also located in the city; but it closed on 30 September 2005, when production was moved by its owners, Kraft Foods, to Poland. However, the historic factory building can still be seen, situated next to the Knavesmire race course.
The city hosts a university (the University of York), a higher education college (York St John College) and a branch of the College of Law. The City's football team (York City) was relegated from the Football League to the Nationwide Conference at the end of the 2003/4 season. York also has a rugby league side, York City Knights and an open rowing club (York city rowing club) located underneath Lendal Bridge. The York area is served by a local newspaper, the Yorkshire Evening Press.
Image:Kingsarams flood.JPG York is also noted for its wealth of pubs. The York area is said to contain one pub for every day of the year, although this is a little exaggerated. Similarly it has been said that there is no point within the city walls where one can stand and not be able to see at least one pub and at least one church.
The city is prone to severe flooding from the River Ouse, and has an extensive (but not always effective) network of flood defences. These include walls along the Ouse, and a barrier across the River Foss where it joins the Ouse. The floods of late October and early November 2000, which were the highest for over 350 years, caused much damage, but the water did not breach the flood walls. Much land within the city has always been too flood-prone for development. Partly as a result of this, there is an unusual amount of green space. The ings are flood meadows along the River Ouse, while the strays are scattered around the city in marshy, low-lying places; the Knavesmire is part of Micklegate Stray. In summer, when they are drier, these areas are used for recreation, and some are grazed by cattle.
York is twinned with:
- Template:Flagicon Dijon, France
- Template:Flagicon Fanteakwa, Ghana
- Template:Flagicon Münster, Germany
Economy
- York's gross domestic product for 2005 was estimated at £3,400 million
Etymology
This city was originally named by the Celts as Eborakon, which may mean "place of yew trees". The name of the Yew is Efrawg in Brythonic, Efwr in Welsh, Iobhar in Irish Gaelic, Iorc in Scottish Gaelic, Evor in Breton and was Eburos in Gaulic. As York was a town in Roman times, its Celtic name is recorded in Roman sources, as Eboracum and Eburacum, with the ending -acum Latinized instead of -acon in celtic.
After 400 AD Anglo-Saxons took over the area and adapted the name by folk etymology to Old English Eoforwīc, which means "wild-boar town". The Proto-Germanic form of Old English eofor is *eburaz. York became Northumbria's centre of power later on. The Vikings, who took over the area later, in turn adapted the name by folk etymology to Norse Jórvík meaning "horse bay", like a town in Bohuslän at the time, which was reduced to York in the centuries after the Norman Conquest.
Local government
York is an ancient borough, and was one of the boroughs reformed by the Municipal Corporations Act 1835 to form a municipal borough. It gained the status of a county borough in 1889, under the Local Government Act 1888, and existed so until 1974, when, under the Local Government Act 1972, it became a non-metropolitan district in the county of North Yorkshire.
In the 1990s UK local government reform, York became one of the many boroughs to regain unitary status, but was the only one to see a substantial alteration in its borders, taking in parts of Selby and Harrogate districts, and about half the population of Ryedale district.
York has 22 wards, which elect between 1 and 3 councillors each, for a total of 47 councillors. The council is controlled by the Liberal Democrats, who have 29 councillors. There are 15 Labour Party councillors, 2 Greens, and one independent. [1]
York and Quakers
Image:St Williams College.jpg York has a long association with the Religious Society of Friends. The York-born Quaker chocolate entrepreneurs and social reformers Joseph Rowntree and Benjamin Seebohm Rowntree left an indelible mark on the city, through both their business interests and their philanthropy. They built the village of New Earswick to provide quality affordable housing for their employees. They also founded two Quaker schools, Bootham School and The Mount, and contributed in large part to the building of York Public Library and the creation of Rowntree Park. The four Rowntree trusts, funded from the Rowntree legacies, are based in York.
The Retreat is a large Quaker mental hospital, situated in the east of the city outside the city walls. It was founded in 1796 by William Tuke; over the next century his son Henry Tuke, grandson Samuel Tuke and great-grandson Daniel Hack Tuke also devoted themselves to mental health reform, continuing to reform The Retreat and publishing a number of works on the subject. Another notable York Quaker was the sculptor Austin Wright.
Places of interest (City Centre)
- Archaelogical Resource Centre
- Assembly Rooms, a grand Palladian public space designed by Lord Burlington, 1731–32, lies behind a rebuilt 19th century facade.
Image:York-minster-inside.jpg Image:NRM line up.jpg Image:York Wheel.jpg
- Bar Convent Museum
- Barley Hall
- Black Swan, pub
- Blue Bell, pub
- Bridges of York
- Clifford's Tower
- Jórvík, The Viking City
- The King's Manor
- Merchant Adventurers' Hall
- Micklegate Bar Museum
- Museum Gardens
- National Centre for Early Music, home of the York Early Music Festival [2]
- National Railway Museum
- St George's York
- St Mary's Abbey
- The Shambles, York's best-preserved medieval street
- Treasurer's House
- York Castle Museum
- York City Art Gallery
- York City Walls (Including Monk Bar Museum)
- York Dungeon
- York Minster
- Yorkshire Museum
- Yorkshire Wheel
Places of interest (Outside the City Centre)
- Askham Bogs
- Askham Bryan Hall
- Bishopthorpe Palace, home to the Archbishop of York
- Elvington Hall
- Heslington Hall
- The Knavesmire
- Lamel Hill
- Middlethorpe Hall, Middlethorpe Manor
- Osbaldwick Hall
- Skelton Hall, Skelton Manor
- Strays of York
- Vale of York
- York Cemetery
- York Racecourse
- Yorkshire Air Museum, Elvington
- Yorkshire Museum of Farming, Murton
Districts, towns, villages
- Acaster Malbis, Acomb, Askham Bryan, Askham Richard
- Bishopthorpe, Bootham
- Clifton, Copmanthorpe, Crockey Hill
- Deighton
- Derwenthorpe (proposed new village)
- Dringhouses
- Dunnington
- Elvington
- Fishergate, Fulford
- The Groves
- Haxby, Heslington, Hessay, Heworth, Holgate, Holtby, Huntington
- Kexby, Knapton
- Layerthorpe
- Middlethorpe, Moor End, Murton
- Naburn, Nether Poppleton, New Earswick
- Osbaldwick
- Rawcliffe, Rufforth
- Skelton, Stockton-on-the-Forest, Strensall, South Bank
- Tang Hall, Towthorpe
- Upper Poppleton
- West Huntington, Wheldrake, Wigginton, Woodthorpe
Notable people associated with York
Individuals
- Mark Addy (b. 1964) (actor)
- Alcuin (c. 735-804) (Christian scholar)
- Kate Atkinson (b. 1951) (author)
- W. H. Auden (1907–1973) (poet)
- John Barry (b. 1933) (composer)
- David Bradley (b. 1942) (actor)
- Michael Burns (actor)
- Vincent Cable (b. 1943) (politician)
- Judi Dench (b. 1934) (actress)
- Frank Dobson (b. 1940) (politician)
- Keith Drinkel (b. 1944) (actor)
- John Earle (c. 1601–1665) (clergyman and author)
- William Etty (1787–1849) (painter)
- Guy Fawkes (1570–1606) (Catholic conspirator involved in the Gunpowder Plot)
- John Flaxman (1755–1826) (sculptor and draughtsman)
- Dustin Gee (1942–1986) (comedian, one half of duo with Les Dennis)
- Christopher Hill (1912–2003) (Marxist historian)
- Frankie Howerd (1917–1992) (comedy actor)
- Ivar the Boneless (794-872) (Viking Chieftain)
- Sheelagh Kelly (author)
- Francis Mason (1799–1874) (American missionary)
- Thomas Morton (1564–1659) (clergyman)
- Xavier Pick (b. 1972) (artist)
- Benjamin Seebohm Rowntree (1871–1954) (chocolate entrepreneur and social reformer)
- Joseph Rowntree (1836–1925) (chocolate entrepreneur and philanthropist)
- John Snow (1813–1858) (pioneer of epidemiology and anaesthesia)
- William Hepworth Thompson (1810–1886) (classical scholar)
- Henry Scott Tuke (1858–1929) (painter)
- James Hack Tuke (1819–1896) (campaigner for famine relief and social reform in Ireland)
- William Tuke (1732–1822), Henry Tuke (1755–1814), Samuel Tuke (1784–1857) and Daniel Hack Tuke (1827–1895) (campaigners for the humane treatment of the insane)
Groups
- Farrah (indie pop/rock group)
- The Mood (1980s band)
- Shed Seven (indie rock group)
- The Guard (Powerpop/Rock band of the 1980's)
- Strange Days (band) (1980's band)
- Zoot and the Roots (1980's band)
Members of the Royal Family
External links
Guides and maps
- Template:Stn art lnk
- York Tourism
- Eating Out, Bars, Pubs & Shops in York.
- The Yorkshire Wheel Photos, Videos and Details of York's newest tourist attraction.
Local media
- York Evening Press local newspaper site, including news, sport, information & classified advertising
- York Student Television
- Websites from York by category
- Location York York news stories submitted by site members, with message boards and image gallery.
Academic
History
Photos and images
- Imagine York: Historic Photographs Online Council Library Archive of historic photographs of York, searchable by keyword.
- York Stories: photo essays of walks in York, emphasizing architecture
- Images of York
- York Architecture Gallery
- City of York Council's flood 2000 archive
- York Wheel Photos of York's newest attraction, the Big Wheel.
Districts of Yorkshire and the Humber | Image:Flag of England.svg |
Barnsley | Bradford | Calderdale | Craven | Doncaster | East Riding of Yorkshire | Hambleton | Harrogate | Hull | Kirklees | Leeds | North Lincolnshire | North East Lincolnshire | Richmondshire | Rotherham | Ryedale | Scarborough | Selby | Sheffield | Wakefield | York | |
Counties with multiple districts: North Yorkshire - South Yorkshire - West Yorkshire |
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