Undetermined Music Artists

Sharing Artistopia
 
Music Is Life @ Artistopia.com

Independent Music Artist:   Sign In  |  Register

Home Music Indie News Discussion Resources Shop Friday, May 25, 2012
  
 
 
  
 

Craven

Music Home >>  Music Genres  >> Undetermined Music
 
  
 

< < < < <
> > > > >
More Info on Craven Similar Undetermined Music Search Artistopia

Biography

Other usesInfobox settlement|name = Craven|type = Non-metropolitan district|District |image_skyline = View of south Settle.jpg|imagesize =|image_caption = View of south Settle from Castlebergh|image_blank_emblem= CravenDistrictCouncilLogo.gif|blank_emblem_type = Logo of The Craven District|image_map = NorthYorkshireCraven.png|map_caption = Shown within North Yorkshire |mapsize = frameless|subdivision_type = List of sovereign states|Sovereign state |subdivision_name = United Kingdom|subdivision_type1 = Constituent country |subdivision_name1 = England|subdivision_type2 = Regions of England|Region |subdivision_name2 = Yorkshire and the Humber |subdivision_type3 = Ceremonial counties of England|Ceremonial county |subdivision_name3 = North Yorkshire |seat_type = Admin.& nbsp;HQ|seat = Skipton |government_type = Craven District Council|leader_title = Local government in England#Councillors and mayors|Leadership :|leader_name = Alternative - Sec.31|leader_title1 = Executive:|leader_name1 = English district control|ONS=36UB|leader_title2 = List of MPs elected in the United Kingdom general election, 2010|MPs :|leader_name2 = Julian Smith (politician)|Julian Smith |leader_title3 =|leader_name3 =|established_title = Founded|established_date =|founder =|area_rank = List of English districts by area|English district area rank|ONS=36UB |area_total_km2 = formatnum:English district area|ONS=36UB|R|latd=53.95 |latm= |lats= |latNS=N|longd=2.02 |longm= |longs= |longEW=W|population_as_of = English statistics year|population_total = formatnum:EnglishDistrictPopulation|ONS=36UB|R|population_rank = List of English districts by population|Ranked EnglishDistrictRank|ONS=36UB |population_density_km2 = auto|timezone = Greenwich Mean Time |utc_offset = +0|timezone_DST = British Summer Time |utc_offset_DST = +1|postal_code_type = Postcode|postal_code = |area_code =|blank_name = ISO 3166-2:GB|ISO 3166-2 |blank_info = |blank1_name = ONS coding system|ONS code |blank1_info = 36UB|blank2_name = British national grid reference system|OS grid reference |blank2_info = |blank3_name = Nomenclature of Territorial Units for Statistics|NUTS 3|blank3_info = |blank4_name = Ethnicity|blank4_info = 96.1% White
2.0% S.Asiancite web|url = http://www.neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/dissemination/LeadTableView.do? a=3& b=277069& c=craven& d=13& e=13& g=475423& i=1001x1003x1004& m=0& r=1& s=1206654091593& enc=1& dsFamilyId=1812|title = Resident Population Estimates by Ethnic Group (Percentages); Mid-2005 Population Estimates|accessdate = 28 March 2008|work = National Statistics Online|publisher=Office for National Statistics
|website = http://www.cravendc.gov.uk/ cravendc.gov.uk
Craven is in recent times the name of a Non-metropolitan district|local government district in North Yorkshire , England that came into being in Local Government Act 1972|1974 , centred on the market town of Skipton . In the changes to British local government of that year this Districts of England|district was formed as the merger of Skipton urban district, Settle Rural District and most of Skipton Rural District , all in the West Riding of Yorkshire . It comprises the upper reaches of Airedale , Wharfedale , Ribblesdale , and includes most of the Aire Gap and Craven Fault#Craven Basin|Craven Basin .

Additionally, the name Craven is much older than the modern district, and once encompassed a larger area. This history is also still reflected in the way the term is still commonly used, for example by the Church of England.
TOC limit|limit=3

History


quote|text=Craven: “The exact extent of it we nowhere find”|sign= Thomas Cox |source=1730Thomas Cox (1731) "Magna Britannia et Hibernia Antiqua Nova'" http://www.onread.com/book/Magna-Britannia-Et-Hibernia-Antiqua-Nova-Or-a-New-Survey-of-Great-Britain-176118 read online. Retrieved November 2010In recorded history Craven has been the name of this district but it was never defined until 1974; its boundaries differed according to whether considering administration, taxation or religion. http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/YKS/index.html#Maps Genuki Yorkshire Maps

Etymology


The name Craven may be derived from the pre-Celtic cravona , meaning stony region.cite book|title=A Dictionary of British Place-Names|year=2003|publisher= Oxford University Press |isbn=0-19-852758-6|editor=Mills, A.D.|page=137Rev. Thomas Cox (1720-31) Magna Britannia et Hibernia Antiqua Nova, Or a New Survey of Great Britain http://www.onread.com/book/Magna-Britannia-Et-Hibernia-Antiqua-Nova-Or-a-New-Survey-of-Great-Britain-176118 read online, Retrieved November 2010
Or from the Celtic ( Cumbric ), related to the Welsh language|Welsh word craf meaning garlic .cite web|title=Institute for Name Studies|url= http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/~aezins/kepn/results_county.php? searcht=Yorkshire%20WR,YOW|publisher= English Place-Name Society |accessdate=25 August 2010 Note: Select the Thorton in Craven entry. In the Middle Ages, the area was known for its ramsons|wild garlic .Citation needed|date=August 2010

Prehistory


The first datable evidence of human life in Craven is ca 9000 BC: a hunter's harpoon point carved out of an antler found in Settle#Tourism|Victoria Cave . Most traces of the Mesolithic nomadic hunters are the flint barbs they set into shafts. Extensive finds of these microliths lie around Malham Tarn and Semerwater . Flint does not occur in the Dales, the nearest outcrop is in East Yorkshire. On higher ground microliths are found near springs at the tree line at convert|500|m|ft|abbr=on|-2 indicating campsites close to the open hunting grounds. The valley woodlands were inhabited by deer, boar and aurochs , the higher ground was open grassland that fed herds of reindeer, elk and horse. No permanent settlements have been found of that age, hunting here was seasonal, returning to the plains in winter.Cite book | last=White | first=Robert | title=The Yorkshire Dales, A landscape Through Time | origyear=1997 | edition=new | year=2005 | publisher=Great Northern Books | location=Ilkley, Yorkshire | isbn=1-905080-05-0

After 5000 BC Neolithic long-distance trade is indicated by the distribution of Stone tool#Neolithic industries|stone axes many of which were of hard volcanic rock with a cutting edge made by polishing. Lithic analysis can identify their quarry source. Axes found in Yorkshire originate in the Langdale axe industry|central Cumbria and are found as far as eastern Yorkshire suggesting they were traded for the flint there. But most finds are in Ribblesdale and Airedale indicating that Craven was their trade route through the Pennines. Farmers permanently settled in Craven, bringing Domestication|domesticated livestock and used those stone axes to clear woodlands, probably by slash-and-burn , to increase areas for grazing and crops.

Anglo-Saxon



Norman Conquest



Although it suggests the length, the Domesday Book does not tell us the width of the boundaries of Craven, for in it only arable land was noted and ploughing was at that date a minor part of Craven agriculture, although cultivators had probably been reduced in numbers by the Harrying of the North . The valley bottoms are usually boggy, shady frost-hollows, with soils of glacial boulder clay very heavy to cultivate. So farms were limited to the well-drained slopes, but not too far up for that is unusable moorland. The band of useful soil in between is so full of rocks that grazing oxen was the living in Craven, with some sheep marginal. http://www.thesunflowertrust.org.uk/OxenhopeVillage/history/oxenhope.htm R Hindley, the History of Oxenhope, pub 1996 Retrieved November 2010. Because grazing land was not tallied in the Domesday Book the full areas of the estates of the manors can only be induced, for example no ploughed land at all was recorded between Cononley and Wennington.

>
Location Modern name Acres, approx Hectares, approx Taxpayer/ s
Chersintone Grassington 360 150Gamel Bern paid the most farm taxes in Craven: twelve curactes four bovates: approximately convert>1500
Freschefelt Threshfield 480 195 Gamel Bern
Cutnelai Cononley 240 100 Thorkil
BradleiBradleys Both 840 350 Arnkeld, Thorkil, Gamel
Fernehil Farnhill 240 100 Gamel
Childeuuic Kildwick 240 100 Arnkeld
EsebruneEastburn 270 120 Gamel Bern
UtelaiUtley 120 50 Vilts
Chichelai Keighley 720 290 Ulfkeld, Thole, Ravensvartr
Wilsedene Wilsden 360 150 Gamel Bern
Acurde Oakworth 120 50 Gamel Bern, Vilts
Neuhuse Newsholmehttp:/ / www.achurchnearyou.com/ newsholme-st-john-keighley Newsholme’s unique church in this hamlet forms part of the farmhouse of Church Farm. Retrieved November 2010 120 50 Vilts
LacocLaycock 240 100 Ravensvartr
Sutun Sutton-in-Craven 240 100 Ravenkeld
Mellinge, Hornebi, WermigetunWennington 1080 440 Ulf
In de hb (in the same places as Ulf)Wennington 180 73 Orm
Tornetun, Borch. Thornton in Lonsdale , Burrow-with-Burrow 720 290 Orm


In 1086 Roger of Poitou was Tenant-in-chief of the western side of Craven: Ribblesdale and the Pendle valley.Roger of Poitou is associated with 632 places after the Conquest http://domesdaymap.co.uk/name/468450/roger-of-poitou/ Open Domesday, The first free online copy of Domesday Book Accessed March 2012 In 1092 he was granted also Lonsdale (hundred)|Lonsdale to defend Morecambe Bay against Kingdom of Scotland|Scottish raiding parties. He ruled both until 1102.
The lord of the east side of Craven, that is from Grassington down to Keighley and eastward, was Baron Robert de Romille. To defend against the Scottish raiders he built the first Skipton Castle in 1090.

14th century



Craven was still suffering from Border Reivers|Scottish raiders for example in 1318 they severely damaged churches as far south as Kildwick . http://www.overend.org.uk/kildwick.html Harry Overend (2003) Kildwick Parish Church Accessed January 2012

In 1377, in the form of Poll Tax records, the first statistics of Craven were collected. From them we can compare the income brackets of various occupations, and the relative worth of villages.Harry Speight (1892) The Craven and north-west Yorkshire highlands pp 29–60. http://www.google.com/books? printsec=frontcover& id=AK8KAAAAYAAJ& output=text& pg=PP1 read online from p 27; or pdf facsimile, pp 38–69.
The records list every hamlet and village using the Hundred (county subdivision)#Other terms|wapentake system .’’Domesday Book: Yorkshire’’ Ian Morris, ed. Morris, Faull, Stinson – Phillimore, 1992 The Wapentake s of Staincliffe (wapentake)|Staincliffe and Ewcross (wapentake)|Ewcross cover Craven but also areas beyond such as Sedburgh to the North. Young King Richard II had commanded that poll tax to pay off the debts he'd inherited from the Hundred Years' War . Its first application in 1377 was a flat rate and the second of 1379 was a sliding scale from 1 groat (4p pence) to 4 marks. But the third of 1381, 4 groats (1 shilling) and up, was applied corruptly and led to the Peasants' Revolt|Great Rising of 1381 and, in 1399, the House of Lancaster taking the throne from York.

16th century


The Deanery#Anglican usage|Deanery of Craven had similar boundaries to the Wapentake of Staincliffe and so included the following areas which are not in the modern secular district of Craven:
  • A large part of what is now the City of Bradford , namely the parishes Keighley , Addingham , and the Silsden and Steeton with Eastburn parts of the parish of Kildwick . However all of Bingley and part of Ilkley , though never part of Staincliffe Wapentake, were within Craven and are also now within Bradford. (They were in the upper division of the Wapentake of Skyrack.)

  • The northern section of the modern Lancashire District of Ribble Valley , including Gisburn in Craven, and the Bowland Forest parishes of Bolton by Bowland , Slaidburn and Great Mitton , the latter including Waddington, Lancashire|Waddington , West Bradford, Lancashire|West Bradford , and Grindleton . ( Sawley, Lancashire|Sawley , while not technically in the old Deanery, is also in this geographical area.)

  • The northeastern section of the modern Lancashire District of Pendle , including Barnoldswick , Bracewell, Lancashire|Bracewell , and the part of the old parish of Thornton in Craven which includes Earby and Kelbrook


  • 17th century hearth tax


    These valuable records also define the area by wapentakes. This tax was introduced by the government of Charles II at a time of serious fiscal emergency, and collection continued until repealed by William and Mary in 1689. Under its terms each liable householder was to pay one shilling for each hearth within their property, due twice annually at the equinox es, Michaelmas (29 September) and Lady Day (25 March). The Yorkshire records of all three ridings are now completely transcribed, analyzed and available free online http://www.hearthtax.org.uk/communities/westriding/ Hearth Tax Online, Roehampton University, 2010 Retrieved 2011-06-24

    History of agriculture


    Sheep


    The hill s and slopes of Craven are greatly involved in the history of sheep particularly in the Wool#History|history of wool .
    After 5000 BC the Neolothic farming movement introduced domesticated sheep,rp|19 but the Roman occupation of Britain introduced advanced sheep husbandry to Britain and made wool into a national industry. Craven was made accessible by major roads from Lancaster, Lancashire|Lancaster through Ingleton, North Yorkshire|Ingleton and from York through Gargrave . The extent of a Roman villa farm excavated at Gargrave implies it practiced grazing on nearby moorland.rp|39By 1000 AD England and Spain History of sheep#In Europe|were recognized as the pinnacles of European sheep wool production.
    About 1200 AD scientific treatises on agricultural estate management began to circulate amongst the Cistercian monasteries in the Yorkshire dales. These indicated the way to greatest profit was to produce wool for export.cite book |last=Trevelyan, O.M. |first=George Macaulay |title= History of England, Volume=One: From the Earliest Times to the Reformation |edition=3 | year=1953 |origyear=1926 |publisher=Doubleday Anchor Books |location=Garden City, N.Y. |isbn=0-385-09234-2 |pages=207, 208, 313, 314 |chapter= 2, 7
    quote|text=“The famous monasteries under the steep, wooded banks of Yorkshire dales began the movement that in the course of four or five hundred years converted most of North England and Scotland from unused wilderness into sheep-run.”|sign= George MaCaulay Trevelyan|source=1926 Fountains Abbey strongly affected Craven in upper Wharfedale, Airedale and Littondale . In 1200 the Abbey owned 15,000 sheep in various locations and traded directly with Italian merchants. On the limestone fells it held extensive sheep runs managed by monastic grange|granges located at valley heads to access both the moors and the rough pasture of valley sides. Many granges developed into Hamlet (place)|hamlets . The Fountains’ sheep administrative centre was at Outgang Hill, Kilnsey .rp|60By 1320 Bolton Priory ’s flock at Malham was about 2,750 and it built extensive sheep farm buildings there. Accounts show that a quarter of its cheese was sheep’s cheese, and that most of the Priory’s came from wool sales.rp|71 It also developed fulling , sorting and grading into industries.rp|95Feudal Lords began to imitate monastic management methods for their own estatesrp|95 and in 1350 when the Black Death killed-off half the rent-paying farmers they had the bailiffs substitute sheep-pasture for tillage. The export of wool to the Flanders looms, and the concurrent growth of cloth manufacture in England, aided by Edward III of England|Edward III 's importation of Flemish weavers to teach his people the higher skill of the craft, made demand for all the wool that English flocks could supply.rp|314 As the profitability of wool further increased some landowners converted all arable land into sheep pasture by evicting whole villages. Over 370 deserted medieval villages have been unearthed in Yorkshire.cite book |title=Yorkshire Landscapes|last= Talbot|first=Rob|coauthors=Robin Whiteman|year=1998 |publisher=Orion Publishing Group|location=London|isbn=0-297-82366-3rp|146 Henry VIII in 1539 Dissolution of the Monasteries|suppressed the Monasteries and sold Littondale and the Bolton Priory's estates in lower Wharefedale and Airedale to Henry Clifford, 1st Earl of Cumberland and the Cliffords|Lord of Skipton .rp|61By 1600 History of sheep#In Europe|the wool trade was the primary source of tax revenue for Queen Elizabeth I . Britain’s success made it a major influence in the development and spread of sheep husbandry worldwide.

    In more modern times the Industrial Revolution brought factory production of wool cloth to towns further down Airedale and many Craven families, made redundant by agricultural machinery, moved south to work in the worsted mills.
    However in 1966 the price of wool fell by 40% due to the increased popularity of synthetic fiber|synthetic fibres . Farmers complain it now costs more to shear a sheep than you can get for its wool and the result is reduced flocks. Although the tough wool of hill sheep is still used for carpet weaving, sheep breeding is now mostly for lambs to sell on for fattening for meat in low pastures.rp|25

    Forestry


    Woodland is an important component of the landscape and are crucial to scenic beauty. The small surviving areas of ancient woodland have high biodiversity value. http://www.yorkshiredales.org.uk/index/specialplace/specialquality-nature.htm Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority, Special Quality of Nature. Accessdate August 2011 However the Pennines#Flora|Pennines are now notably lacking in trees despite archaeological evidence showing 90% was woodlands before human settlement. Palynology indicates a coincident decline in trees and increase in grasses. The dramatic shortage of natural woodlands is due to overgraze|overgrazing and direct clearance for pasture. http://www.yorkshiredales.org.uk/index/lookingafter/projectwork/wildlifeprojects.htm Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority, Limestone wildlife Projects. Accessdate August 2011
    Since sheep are Grazing|grazers not Browsing (herbivory)|browsers they do Sheep#Diet|not affect mature trees however they devour all their seedlings. With a much narrower face than cattle they crop plants very close to the ground and with Grazing#Grazing systems|continuous grazing can overgraze land rapidly.
    Ancient Common land|Common Grazing rights made it impossible to actively grow trees, even for fuel, because coppicing requires enclosure to protect re-growth from sheep.rp|94Since 2002 The Yorkshire Dales National Park has encouraged sheep farmers to switch uplands livestock to cattle since they do not graze so intensively. Traditional breeds such as Blue greys|Blue Greys and Belted Galloway#Characteristics|Belted Galloways can survive the harsh winters and live off the rough grasses just as well a sheep. http://www.yorkshiredales.org.uk/index/lookingafter/projectwork/limestonecountryproject.htm
    Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority, Limestone Country Project. Access date August 2011
    Since 1968 some moorland has been Afforestation|afforested by the Forestry Commission .rp|132Since 2005 the collection of Indigenous (ecology)|indigenous seeds and propagation by the Dales National Park produced saplings for planting schemes that began in 2010.

    Cattle


    In the 16th and 17th centuries Longhorn cattle prevailed in Craven. Good quality bulls were bought Communitas|communally to improve the livestock on the common land beside each village. In the 18th century they Crossbreed|crossbred with Shorthorn s: fully grown crossbreeds weighed 420–560 pounds. Some Pastoral farming|graziers of the Craven highlands also visited Scotland , for example Oban , Lanark and Stirling , to purchased stock to be brought down the drove road s to the cattle-rearing district. In the summer of 1745 the celebrated Mr Birtwhistle brought 20,000 head from the northernmost parts of Scotland to Great Close near Malham .rp|53In modern times dairy farming has predominated. After the 1970s Holstein cattle|Holstein Holstein cattle#United Kingdom|Friesians became the most popular breed.cite book |last=Donkin|first=Kevin|title= Circular Walks along the Pennine Way|edition=1|year=2006|publisher=Frances Lincoln Ltd |location=London |isbn=978-0-7112-2665-4

    Crops


    Pollen analysis shows that the peak of arable agriculture in Craven was 320-410 AD. But outbreaks of pestilence in the 6th century and in the 7-8th century resulted in a shift away from ploughing to grazing. However, the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records the Danish Viking settlers “were engaged in ploughing and making a living for themselves.”rp|47Cultivation lynchet terraces and ridge-and-furrow fields of the Middle Ages are visible alongside many villages particularly in Wharfedale and Malhamdalerp|69 and tithe records show they grew crops of oat s, barley and wheatcite book | last=Hartley| first=Marie| authorlink=Marie Hartley (author)| coauthors= Joan Ingilby |title=Life and Tradition in the Yorkshire Dales| publisher=J. M. Dent & Sons Ltd| place=London| year=1968 | isbn=0-498-07668-7 Life and Tradition in the Yorkshire Dalesrp|21 and in rotation, beans and peas.rp|71But the History of sheep#In Europe|wool boom of the 16th century caused most arable land to be turned into pasture. In the 18th century miller’s records show they had to import wheat to grind and sell as flourrp|21 but the farmers still grew oats for it formed the principle article of their subsistence, some made into bread and puddingscite book | last=Whitaker| first=Thomas Dunham |title=The History and Antiquities of the Deanery of Craven, in the county of York| publisher= Nichols, Payne etc| year=1805|isbn=978-1-241-34269-2Whitaker’s History and Antiquities of the Deanery of Craven but mostly cooked as oatcake s.
    quote|text=“We were browt up on haverbreead and cheese”|sign= Mr J Postlethwaite|source=1940rp|27

    Administration


    In the 18th century the national Board of Agriculture commissioned a survey of agriculture in the region with a view of improving it. This was published to the public in 1793 as General view of the Agriculture of the West Riding of Yorkshire cite book |title= http://books.google.com/books/about/General_view_of_the_agriculture_of_the_W.html? id=lv5KAAAAYAAJ General view of the Agriculture of the West Riding of Yorkshire | last= Rennie |coauthors= Broun and Shirreff | year=1793 |publisher= W Bulmer & Co.|location= London a 140-page book detailing every factor. The wide variety of soil composition resulted in Tithe#Tithing in the Middle Ages|tithes ranging from 6 shillings up to 3 pounds per acre and farms leasing from 50 to 500 pounds per year. It details by parish quantities of cattle and crop produced, their crop rotation|rotation and market value. The report recommended more wheat and turnips; more sheep and of better breed; criticized poor drainage and design of farm buildings and taught principles of farm management.

    Average wages then paid to employees were 12 pounds per annum with victuals and drink; and to temporary labourers 2 shillings and sixpence per day with beer. Hours of work in winter were “dawn till dark” and in harvest time “six till six, with one hour for dinner and another for drinking”. The author shows concern for their virtue and welfare.

    Government


    Craven is administered by the Craven District Council which is made up of 30 councillors who represent the 19 Wards of the United Kingdom|wards that make up the district.cite web|url= http://www.cravendc.gov.uk/Craven/Residents/Council+and+Democracy/Democracy/YourCouncillors/ |title=Your Councillors |date=5 June 2008 |publisher=Craven District Council |accessdate=18 June 2009


    On a national level Craven forms part of the Skipton and Ripon (UK Parliament constituency)|Skipton and Ripon constituency which is currently represented by the Conservative Party (UK)|Conservative Member of Parliament Julian Smith (politician)|Julian Smith .

    Craven District Council allies with other organizations:
  • North Yorkshire County is a two tier local authority area, with NYCC being the top and Craven District Council the bottom tier. Whilst CDC is responsible for providing some services NYCC is responsible for others. http://www.northyorks.gov.uk/index.aspx? articleid=3112/ North Yorkshire County Council

  • The Leeds City Region is the economic area comprising Craven, Harrogate, York, Bradford, Leeds, Selby, Calderdale, Kirklees, Wakefield and Barnsley. LCR members work together in fields such as transport, housing and spatial planning. http://www.leeds.gov.uk/leedscityregion/ The Leeds City Region

  • North Yorkshire Strategic Partnership is a partnership of public sector, private sector and voluntary organizations in Craven working together to meet the needs of the communities. http://www.nysp.org.uk/ North Yorkshire Strategic Partnership (NYSP)

  • ''North Yorkshire Children's Trust'', part of the NYSP, represents all those agencies that working with children and young people across the county. NYCT promotes the five national Every Child Matters outcomes for children. http://www.nysp.org.uk/ The North Yorkshire Children's Trust

  • York and North Yorkshire Cultural Partnership brings together a number of Yorkshire agencies that bring the benefits of culture to quality of life and economic regeneration. This partnership is working together to deliver the York and North Yorkshire Cultural Strategy 2009–2014. http://www.ynyculture.org/ York and North Yorkshire Cultural Partnership

  • Welcome to Yorkshire works to improves what the region has to offer tourists. http://www.ytb.org.uk/ Welcome to Yorkshire


  • Towns


    The largest town in Craven is Skipton . Other major population centres in the region include High Bentham , Settle , Grassington . Due to expansion the villages of Sutton-in-Craven , Cross Hills and Glusburn now make one urban conglomerate.

    Other Cravens


    West Craven


    main|West CravenIn the 1974 government reorganization of the Non-metropolitan district|shire districts some towns were lost to Lancashire but because of cultural history their area is known as West Craven . These are Barnoldswick , Earby , Sough , Kelbrook , Salterforth and Bracewell and Brogden .

    Archdeaconry of Craven



    The Church of England is considering charging their boundary of Bowland to match that of civic Lancashire, but this is unlikely to happen before July 2013. http://www.cravenherald.co.uk/ Church of England report could affect churches across Craven. Craven Herald & Pioneer, 12 February 2011

    South Craven


    The Deanery of South Craven comprises 20 parishes: Cononley, Cowling, Cross Roads cum Lees, Cullingworth, Denholme, East Morton, Harden, Haworth, Ingrow, Kildwick, Newsholme, Oakworth, Oxenhope, Riddlesden, Sildsden, Steeton with Eastburn, Sutton-in-craven, Thwaites Brow, Utley, Wilsden. Civic boundaries further contrast in that only Bradley, Cowling, Kildwick and Sutton-in-craven are in North Yorkshire, the rest are in West Yorkshire.

    Geography


    Craven comprises the upper reaches of Airedale , Wharfedale , Ribblesdale and the river Wenning of Lonsdale (hundred)|Lonsdale .

    Topography


    main|Aire Gap
    To the route’s north stand Carboniferous limestone|limestone mountains of up to convert|736|m|abbr=on|0 above mean sea level and to its south lie bleak Millstone Grit|sandstone moors, that above convert|275|m|abbr=on|0 grow little but bracken. http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/domesday/dblock/GB-400000-441000/page/4 page 4 and http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/domesday/dblock/GB-400000-441000/page/5 page 5, Marginal Upland Grazing Sutton Moor, Domesday Reloaded, BBC 1986

    quote|text=To walk the Pennine moors is "potentially dangerous if the weather is bad and you are ill equipped. If the cloud comes down you will need both a compass and a knowledge of how to use it."|sign= Jim Jarratt |source=2006 http://www.jimjarratt.co.uk/walks/watersheds/SECTION%203.html "The Watersheds Walk" by Jim Jarratt Retrieved September 2010The treeless moorland gives no shelter from storms. Even modern Pennines#Transport|Pennine transport can find it a formidable barrier for roads can be blocked by snow for several days. But the Craven route is a welcoming sheltered passageway, and also inhabited along its length.

    The railway-builders sought the lowest course through the valleys of Craven and found that to be convert|166|m|abbr=on|0 near Giggleswick scar at Coord|54.074167|N|2.318056|W|display=inline|name=The lowest pass at Giggleswick Scar, and convert|160|m|abbr=on|0 just East of Hellifield at Coord|54.00000|N|2.16667|W|display=inline|name=Aire Gap, the pass between Ribblesdale and Airedale a point labeled Aire Gap on maps.Enter "Aire Gap, United Kigdom" on http://www.bing.com/maps Bing Maps

    The nearest alternative pass through the Pennines is Stainmore Gap (Eden-Tees) http://www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/leisure Ordnance Survey Explorer Map, OL41, Forest of Bowland and Ribblesdale ISBN 978-0-319-24071-7 to the North, but that is not in Craven’s league for it climbs to convert|409|m|abbr=on|0 and its climate is Pennines#Climate|classed as sub-arctic in places.cite web| url = http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/climate/uk/averages/regmapavge.html#| title = Regional mapped climate averages| publisher = The Met Office The nearest low-level routes across the country are the convert|228|m|abbr=on|0 River Tyne|Tyne Gap over convert|100|km|abbr=on|0 to the north, or the Midlands (England)|Midlands just as far to the south.

    Natural vegetation


    As the Ice age Ice sheet|glacial sheets retreated from Craven ca 11,500 BC plants returned to the bare earth and archaeological palynology can identify their species. The first trees to settle were willow, birch and juniper, followed later by alder and pine. By 6500 BC temperatures were warmer and woodlands covered 90% of the dales with mostly pine, elm, lime and oak. On the limestone soils the oak was slower to colonize and pine and birch predominated. Around 3000 BC a noticeable decline in tree pollen indicates that Neolithic farmers were clearing woodland to increase grazing for domestic livestock, and studies at Linton, North Yorkshire|Linton Mires and Eshton|Eshton Tarn find an increase in grassland species in Craven.

    On poorly drained impermeable areas of millstone grit, shale or clays the topsoil gets waterlogged in Winter and Spring. Here tree suppression combined with the heavier rainfall results in blanket bog up to convert|2|m|ft|abbr=on|0 thick. The erosion of peat ca 2010 still exposes stumps of ancient trees.
    quote|text=“In digging it away they frequently find vast fir trees, perfectly sound, and some oaks...”|sign= Arthur Young|source=1771Arthur Young (1771) "A Six Month Tour of the North of England’"
    Pennines#Flora|Vegetation in the Pennines is adapted to subarctic climates, but altitude and acidity are also factors. For example on Sutton-in-Craven|Sutton Moor the millstone grit’s topsoil below convert|275|m|ft|abbr=on|0 has a soil ph that is almost neutral, ph 6 to 7, and so grows good grazing. But above convert|275|m|ft|abbr=on|0 it is acidic, ph 2 to 4, and so can grow only bracken , Ericaceae|heather , sphagnum , and coarse grasses such as cottongrass , Molinia caerulea|purple moor grass and Juncus|heath rush .cite book |title=The Yorkshire Dales: South and West|last=Kelsall|first= Dennis |coauthors=Jan Kelsall |year=2008 |publisher=Cicerone |location= Milnthorpe |isbn=978185284451 Please check ISBN|reason=Invalid length.rp|26 Dressing it with lime produces better quality grass for sheep grazing - such is named marginal upland grazing. This points to the advantage of Pastoral farming near Craven Fault where the lime is so available.

    Demography


  • The population is increasing and growing older. By 2020 Craven’s population is projected at 63,400, an increase of 14.2% (2006 based sub-national population projections ONS).

  • 95.6% of the Districts population is white British, with ethnic minority (BME) groups making up 4.4% (Mid Year 2006 Population Estimates, Experimental Statistics ONS).

  • Young people aged 19 and under make up 22% of the population, those aged 20 to 64 make up 56%, and those aged 65 and over 22% (Mid Year 2008 Population Estimates, ONS)

  • 17.23% of the population consider themselves to have a long-term limiting illness or disability (2001 Census Statistics ONS).


  • Economy


    Annual Business Inquiry 2008>
    Sector !! Quantity !! %
    Manufacturing
    Construction
    Distribution, Hotels and Restaurants
    Transport and Communications
    Banking, Finance and Insurance
    Public Admin, Education and Health
    Other

    Economic forecasts for 2010 show that the Craven District's diverse economy, measured in Gross Value Added (GVA), is worth £1.14 billion ($1.87 billion) Since 1998 the value of the District’s economy has grown by 45%. Craven hosts a variety of small businesses - 72% employ less than four people. Businesses that employ above 50 employees (2.2%) are mostly in the south of the District.
  • The visitor economy sector has the largest number of businesses.

  • The banking, finance and insurance sector has experienced significant growth since 2003 mainly through the Skipton Building Society group.

  • Agriculture and land-based industries form a significant part of the District’s economy, particularly within the remoter areas.

  • Manufacturing has declined since 2003 but is still a key sector: Major manufacturers are Johnson & Johnson Wound Management and Angus Fire & Transtechnology. http://www.cravendc.gov.uk/Craven/Business/EconomicDevelopment/ Craven District Council Economic Development Unit


  • Traditional mainstays


    Agriculture


    The business of agriculture revolves around the Market towns of Craven:
    http://www.daelnet.co.uk/local/market_days.cfm Daelnet>
    Market town !! Street market !! Farmers !! Crops auction !! Cattle auction !! Other livestock
    Bentham
    Ingleton
    Settle
    Gisburn Gisburn is now in Lancashire but is still an auction market for Craven
    Grassington
    Skipton


    AHDB, the national Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board, http://www.ahdb.org.uk/ The Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board issues regional reports with constant updates on agricultural output:
  • CATTLE: For example on 18 July 2011 at Skipton 108 cattle were sold including 55 prime steers@ave £123 ($202); 53 heifers@ave £157; 2 young bulls@ £120; 21 older heifers@ £147. http://www.eblex.org.uk/markets/ EBLEX

  • SHEEP: For example at Skipton 18 July 2011 price average for 985 lambs was £188; and for 278 ewes/rams £156. Sheep dogs auctions are held seasonally at Skipton and Bentham - the world record price was broken February 2011 with £6,300 ($10,270) for Dewi Fan - previous record £5,145 ($8,390) http://admin.ccmauctions.com/uploads/110211.dog%20results.pdf World record price broken again at Skipton working dogs sale. pdf

  • DAIRY: Traditionally mostly sold as cheese. North Yorkshire in 2008 had 649 holdings with 71,518 dairy cows aged over 2 years. Average annual milk yield is 7,406 litres/cow. Wholesale production of milk for all of North Yorkshire 2009/10 was 488,894,588 litres. http://www.dairyco.org.uk/library/market-information.aspx Daryco Org UK Daryco Org UK


  • Two thirds of Craven lie within the Yorkshire Dales National Park where traditional landscape preservation is required http://www.cravendc.gov.uk/NR/rdonlyres/4FE44BAA-8109-432A-B4D8-01C24FE62AD5/4235/CouncilPlan20092012April10RevisionPublished6415.pdf The Craven District Plan 2009-2012.pdf (9.8MB) http://www.yorkshiredales.org.uk/index/lookingafter.htm Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority

    Quarrying


    Silurian gritstones are quarried along the North Craven Fault line above Ingleton and in Ribblesdale. Lower Carboniferous Great Scar Limestone is also quarried in those areas and near Grassington ; and Carboniferous reef limestones are quarried around Skipton.cite book |title=Geology of the Yorkshire Dales National Park |last= Wilson |first=Alfred |year=1992 |publisher=Yorkshire Dales National Park Committee |location=Grassington |isbn=0-905455-34-7

    Employment


    NOMIS local labour force survey, annual population survey 2001>
    Occupation !! %
    Sales and customer service
    Personnel services
    Process: Plant
    Administration
    Elementary
    Professional occupations
    Associate Professionals
    Skilled Trades
    Managers and senior officials


    >
    Sector !! Quantity !! %
    Agriculture
    Manufacturing
    Construction
    Distribution, Hotels and Restaurants
    Transport and Communications
    Banking, Finance and Insurance
    Public Administration, Education and Health
    Other


    In 2008 there were 26,591 employed; 22% were self-employed. In 2010 each Full Time Equivalent (FTE) employee contributed £40,311 to the District’s economy, representing an increase in productivity of 21.9% since 1998; an annual increase of 1.8%. The value of output per capita (estimated to be £19,703) has increased by 32% since 1998.

    Education


    Jobskills


    The proportion of the working age population with high levels educational attainment is above the national average, and 40% of the District’s residents have managerial and professional occupations.
    Also Lantra's Landskills offers workshops in efficiency and profitability in agriculture, horticulture and forestry with up to 70% funding. Caven is covered in Farm Business Support and Development and Yorkshire Rural Training Network . http://www.lantra.co.uk/LandSkills-YH Lantra Landskills Yorkshire and Humber
    Yet from 2004 to 2009 there was generally a decline in attainment of about 12% and the number of people in the District with no qualifications increased by 1.8%. Such people have reduced employment options, however Craven College http://www.craven-college.ac.uk/index.php Craven College in Skipton is one of the largest Further Education Colleges in North Yorkshire and provides an outreach service to rural areas.

    Museums


    http://www.cravenmuseum.org Craven Museum & Gallery in Skipton is one of three museums in the district. It has obtained funding to deliver various projects:
  • The Phoenix Project; delivered in partnership with the three other museums in Craven increased accessibility of collections.

  • The Archaeology in the Landscape project, targeting young people, families and the disadvantaged, delivers events, workshops, demonstrations and education programmes to 3,460 young people and over 17,000 adults.

  • The Young Archaeologists Club programme delivered museum education to approx 3,000 students 2009–2010.


  • As part of the projects above Craven Museum & Gallery staff worked with both the Museum of North Craven Life, The Folly in Settle http://www.ncbpt.org.uk/ The Museum of North Craven Life in Settle and the Grassington Folk Museum. http://www.grassingtonfolkmuseum.org.uk.

    Arts


    Craven District supports arts through music, theatre, dance, literature, visual arts and festivals. Funding from the Arts Council England (Yorkshire) alone totaled £435,811 between 2006 and 2009. Grants from other sources including the Gulbenkian Fund and Esme Fairburn Trust totaling well over an additional £160,000. A new exhibition gallery was opened in 2005 at Craven Museum & Gallery http://www.cravenmuseum.org, Skipton, which now hosts a programme of exhibitions each year.

    Sport


    Craven Council opened the Craven Pool and Fitness Centre in 2003 and extended it in 2007. The Centre reached the semi-finals in the Best Semi Best Sports Project category of The National Lottery Awards. The Craven Active Sports Network develops opportunities for participation in sport and active recreation, sourcing funding for a variety of projects throughout the District, totaling over £14.5 million in 2001–2011. The National Sport Unlimited Scheme , delivering a programme of sporting activity to 1205 young people and teenagers, brought in £45,000 of external funding.

    Notable people


    William Craven (Lord Mayor of London)|William Craven of Appletreewick , born in a modest family, went to London and rose rapidly to became its Lord Mayor. He is sometimes referred to as "Aptrick's Dick Whittington" suggesting the story of Dick Whittington is based on his life.cite book|last=Peach|first=Howard|title=Curious tales of Old North Yorkshire|publisher=Sigma Leisure|year=2003|pages=13–14|chapter=People: Aptrick's Dick Whittington|isbn=1-85058-793-0|url= http://books.google.co.uk/books? id=lSGub5NxZNYC& pg=PA13& lpg=PA13& dq=william+craven+dick+whittington& source=web& ots=RKGkZm7JDt& sig=FCwJDjkfPjGo-y8VYcsacNL3vY0& hl=en& sa=X& oi=book_result& resnum=2& ct=result|accessdate=20 August 2008
    William was born c1518 in Appletreewick near Skipton. At age 14 was sent to London to apprentice to a Watling Street Tailor. He qualified in 1569 and made such a fine impression that in 1600 he was made Alderman of Bishopgate; in 1601 he was chosen Lord Mayor of London and in 1603 was knighted by James I.
    He made benefactions to Craven Yorkshire, founding the school in Burnsall .cite web|url= http://www.burnsall.ik.org/news/24861166563.ikml|title=History of Burnsall School|accessdate=27 March 2011

    William’s son John founded the famous Craven Scholarships at Oxford and Cambridge Universities and in 1647 left many large charitable bequests to North Yorkshire towns including Burnsall and Skipton in Craven.

    After 1660 William's first son William Craven, 1st Earl of Craven (1608–1697)|William Craven was made the first Earl of Craven by Charles II. However, that title was eponym inous for the estate was Uffington Berkshire; he was in no sense a Titular ruler|lord of Craven Yorkshire.

    Lady Anne Clifford , 14th Baroness de Clifford owned and restored Skipton Castle in 1665.

    Gallery





    References


    Reflist

    Further reading


  • cite book |title=The Dialect of Craven |trans_title =Horæ momenta Cravenæ |last= Carr|first=William |year=1828 |publisher=Wm. Crofts |location=London |isbn= 978-0-554-43398-1


  • cite book | last=Pontefract| first=Ella| authorlink=Ella Pontefract| coauthors= Marie Hartley |title=Wharfedale| publisher=J. M. Dent & Sons Ltd| place=London| year=1938|isbn= 978-1-870071-21-5


  • External links


  • http://www.cravendc.gov.uk/ Craven District Council

  • http://www.northyorks.gov.uk/ North Yorkshire County Council

  • http://www.cravenmuseum.org/ Craven Museum & Gallery, Skipton

  • http://www.northcravenhistoricalresearch.co.uk North Craven Historical Research Group, Settle


  • Yorkshire and the HumberNorth YorkshireUse dmy dates|date=August 2010
    Category:Craven (district)|
    Category:Local government districts of North Yorkshire
    Category:1974 establishments in England
    Category:Leeds City Region
    Category:Non-metropolitan districts of North Yorkshire
    Category:Local government districts of Yorkshire and the Humber

    de:Craven (District)
    es:Craven
    fr:Craven (district)
    it:Craven
    nl:Craven
    no:Craven
    pl:Craven
    ro:Craven
    sv:Craven

    Copyright Citations

    This article is licensed under the GNU License
    Click here for original article: Craven





          

     
       
     
    Home  |  About Us  |  Privacy  |  Sitemap  |  FAQs  |  Terms and Conditions
     
    Copyright 2012, iCubator Labs, LLC, All Rights Reserved.