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・ Cockerell
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Cockermouth (UK Parliament constituency)
・ Cockermouth and Workington Railway
・ Cockermouth by-election, 1879
・ Cockermouth by-election, 1906
・ Cockermouth by-election, 1916
・ Cockermouth Castle
・ Cockermouth Cricket Club
・ Cockermouth railway station
・ Cockermouth River
・ Cockermouth Rural District
・ Cockermouth School
・ Cockermouth, Keswick and Penrith Railway
・ Cockernonnie
・ Cockersand Abbey
・ Cockersdale


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Cockermouth (UK Parliament constituency) : ウィキペディア英語版
Cockermouth (UK Parliament constituency)

Cockermouth was the name of a constituency of the House of Commons of the Parliament of England in 1295, and again from 1641, then of the Parliament of Great Britain from 1707 to 1800 and of the Parliament of the United Kingdom from 1801 to 1918. It was a parliamentary borough represented by two Members of Parliament until 1868, and by one member from 1868 to 1885. The name was then transferred to a county constituency electing one MP from 1885 until 1918.
Notable MPs have included the regicide, Francis Allen.
==The borough constituency (until 1885)==

Until the Great Reform Act of 1832, the constituency consisted solely of the market town of Cockermouth in Cumberland. It first returned members to the Model Parliament of 1295, but its franchise then seems to have lapsed until 1641, when the Long Parliament passed a resolution (15 February 1641) to restore its ancient privileges.
The right of election in Cockermouth was vested in the burgage tenants of the borough, of whom there were about 300 in 1832. Cockermouth was considered a pocket borough, with the vast majority of the voters being under the influence of the Lowther family.
At the time of the 1831 census, the borough included just over 1,000 houses and had a population of 4,536. The Reform Act expanded the boundaries to bring in the neighbouring parishes of Eaglesfield, Brigham, Papcastle and Bridekirk, and part of Dovenby, increasing the population to 6,022 and encompassing 1,325 houses. This made the borough big enough to retain both its members. However, in the next wave of reform, introduced at the 1868 general election, one of Cockermouth's two seats was withdrawn, and in 1885 the borough was abolished altogether, although the name was transferred to the surrounding county constituency.

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