Difference between revisions of "West Derby"

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'''West Derby''', a historically important medieval manor, is a village in [[Lancashire]] that now forms a suburb of [[Liverpool]]. It lends its name to the largest hundred in the county palatine.
 
'''West Derby''', a historically important medieval manor, is a village in [[Lancashire]] that now forms a suburb of [[Liverpool]]. It lends its name to the largest hundred in the county palatine.
  
The area's history as an administrative centre dates back over 1000 years, when a Wapentake courthouse was established there by the Vikings.<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/liverpool/localhistory/mersey_times/issue_05/west_derby_village/court_house.shtml West Dervy Courthouse - Liverpool - BBC] </ref> West Derby (then called ''Derbei'') was the largest settlement in [[Cheshire]] at the time of the ''[[Domesday Book]]'' (1086).<ref>[https://opendomesday.org/county/cheshire/ Cheshire - Domesday Book]</ref> At this time, Liverpool was one of six berewicks (outlying estates) of West Derby.<ref>[https://historic-liverpool.co.uk/historic-townships/westderby/ History of West Derby: medieval manor and consular suburb]</ref> The name of the Earldom of Derby (first creation 1139) confers its title from West Derby (as opposed to the Derby or Derbyshire).<ref>[<ref>Stanley, Peter Edward, ''The House of Stanley: The History of an English Family from the 12th Century'' (Pentland Press, 1998), p. 139</ref> </ref> The district was incorporated into Liverpool between 1835, when the city's administrative boundaries expanded to include West Derby, and 1922, when the West Derby civil parish was abolished.
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The area's history as an administrative centre dates back over 1000 years, when a Wapentake courthouse was established there by the Vikings.<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/liverpool/localhistory/mersey_times/issue_05/west_derby_village/court_house.shtml West Dervy Courthouse - Liverpool - BBC] </ref> West Derby (then called ''Derbei'') was the largest settlement in [[Cheshire]] at the time of the ''[[Domesday Book]]'' (1086).<ref>[https://opendomesday.org/county/cheshire/ Cheshire - Domesday Book]</ref> At this time, Liverpool was one of six berewicks (outlying estates) of West Derby.<ref>[https://historic-liverpool.co.uk/historic-townships/westderby/ History of West Derby: medieval manor and consular suburb]</ref> The name of the Earldom of Derby (first creation 1139) confers its title from West Derby (as opposed to [[Derby]] or [[Derbyshire]]).<ref>Stanley, Peter Edward, ''The House of Stanley: The History of an English Family from the 12th Century'' (Pentland Press, 1998), p. 139</ref>The district was incorporated into Liverpool between 1835, when the city's administrative boundaries expanded to include West Derby, and 1922, when the West Derby civil parish was abolished.
 
==Referecnes==
 
==Referecnes==
 
{{reflist}}
 
{{reflist}}
 
[[Category:Settlements in Lancashire]]
 
[[Category:Settlements in Lancashire]]
 
[[Category:Suburbs of Liverpool]]
 
[[Category:Suburbs of Liverpool]]

Revision as of 09:29, April 24, 2025

West Derby, a historically important medieval manor, is a village in Lancashire that now forms a suburb of Liverpool. It lends its name to the largest hundred in the county palatine.

The area's history as an administrative centre dates back over 1000 years, when a Wapentake courthouse was established there by the Vikings.[1] West Derby (then called Derbei) was the largest settlement in Cheshire at the time of the Domesday Book (1086).[2] At this time, Liverpool was one of six berewicks (outlying estates) of West Derby.[3] The name of the Earldom of Derby (first creation 1139) confers its title from West Derby (as opposed to Derby or Derbyshire).[4]The district was incorporated into Liverpool between 1835, when the city's administrative boundaries expanded to include West Derby, and 1922, when the West Derby civil parish was abolished.

Referecnes

  1. West Dervy Courthouse - Liverpool - BBC
  2. Cheshire - Domesday Book
  3. History of West Derby: medieval manor and consular suburb
  4. Stanley, Peter Edward, The House of Stanley: The History of an English Family from the 12th Century (Pentland Press, 1998), p. 139