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Explore England's Past

Market Towns

The market place and 17th century market house at Ledbury, Herefordshire

Numerous British towns are distinctively urban because at some point in the medieval period they acquired market rights, usually by charter. Although many of those who were chartered at that time have been unable to sustain their markets, and are often today simply villages, others have from time to time joined the group. Even great cities such as Liverpool, Manchester, Birmingham, and Leeds were no more than small market towns in the early Middle Ages, while other places such as Newark and Oakham remain local trading and social centres much as they always have been. Although some markets date from the Anglo-Saxon period, the majority date from the population expansion of the period from the 12th century to the Black Death. 2713 royal charters for markets were granted between 1199 and 1483, although some of these were extensions or confirmations of existing rights. Many of the new markets did not survive the Black Death.

Markets needed market places, and many of these were laid out in the Middle Ages. In many cases the original plan can still be seen on the ground despite the fact that the surrounding buildings are likely to be Georgian, Victorian or even more recent, especially where banks, shops and public houses are the main featured buildings, often in different styles. Many still provide homes for a weekly market although in larger towns the venue for the market has often shifted because of traffic and other problems in the centre. In planned towns, mainly from the medieval period, market places were usually a central features whether square, rectangular or triangular. Burgage plots were paid out around the marketplace and adjoining streets with narrow frontages onto the best trading locations.

Over time, market places were encroached upon by ‘permanent’ stalls, perhaps better known to us as shops. Ludlow is a good example of a market place where the encroachment is clear on the ground, as is Ashbourne in Derbyshire, but there are no shortage of examples. Market crosses occasionally survive, although often in a modern rebuilt form, and market halls can be found in places such as Ledbury, Herefordshire. In the early days they tended to be timber-framed and to be raised on pillars which provided shelter for traders beneath. Although the number of markets has been in decline since the 14th century, there are still numerous towns which have not gone on to develop more substantive industrial and commercial roles, and can still most accurately be termed market towns, busier on the day or days in the week when they are entitled to hold markets, than at other times. Newark, Nottinghamshire, is a good example.

Theme Items

Dulverton from Battleton

During the 12th and 13th centuries, as the population and economy of England expanded, a large number of new towns were laid out in most parts of t

Charting the course of Sunderland's population growth from its early beginning as a small fishing town, 'in great decay of buildings and inhabitant

Ledbury street names, like those of most established towns, resonate with history.

This two-storey timber-framed building is a key central structure in Ledbury and an important visual symbol of the town.

The settlement which developed into Ledbury grew up in the Anglo-Saxon period at an important crossroads where the road from Hereford to Worcester

This picturesque lane is one of the earliest roads in Ledbury; it leads to the parish church.

When the Bishop of Hereford established a borough in his rural manor of Ledbury in the early twelfth century a new market place was laid out in wha

This was one of the original streets of the medieval town, its name recorded from 1288.

The earliest name for the street, recorded from 1288, was Bishop Street, after the bishop of Hereford, who probably held land there.

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