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 Kirby Misperton

This parish, also called Kirby-over-Carr, or the Church-town beyond the marsh, is situated in the vale of the Rye, which river forms its southern boundary.. It includes the townships of Kirby Misperton, Barughs Ambo, Great and Little: Habton, and Ryton, containing in all an area of about 7,000 acres, and 952 inhabitants, In the first-named township there are 1,717 acres of land under assessment, of which the rateable value is £2,186; the inhabitants number 270.

The village of Kirby Misperton is seated on an eminence about four miles S. of Pickering. Mr. Frank, in his interesting work, "Ryedale and North Yorkshire Antiquities," supposes a monastery to have once stood here, and that the second part of the name is consequently a corruption of Minstertown; but a more probable supposition is that Misperton was the name of some early owner of the estate.

An ancient parish was a village or group of villages or hamlets and the adjacent lands. Originally they held ecclesiastical functions, but from the sixteenth century onwards they also acquired civil roles.

Preceding the Norman Conquest and until England's break with Rome (1533-7), ancient parishes (groups of villages or hamlets and their adjacent lands) existed for ecclesiastical functions, whilst Vills (townships) and Manors dealt with the secular government matters. These parishes could be identified as a conglomeration of ancient rights which became associated with a specific area, such as the area over which a clergyman had jurisdiction. As a result of the Hundred Years War there was a decline in the administrative status of England's feudal system, the Vill and Manor ceased their local government functions, but the parish, as a ecclesiastical unit, remained (Jackson, 1966, p.2). The dissolution of the monasteries led to the ancient parish being left with the duty of relieving its own poor, starting in Elizabeth I's reign with the first Poor Relief Act (1597). This involved the appointment of Overseers and levying parishioners and meant the ancient parish began performing both secular and ecclesiastical roles. The adoption of the parish as an administrative unit by the Government during the sixteenth century aided the development of public services for both urban and rural areas. Authority of urban parishes was ceded to urban districts and boroughs as they developed, but rural parishes still retain some administrative qualities, such as the parish council.

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