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Great Mitton : ウィキペディア英語版
Great Mitton

Great Mitton is a village and a civil parish in the Ribble Valley, Lancashire, England.〔Great Mitton http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/YKS/WRY/Greatmitton〕 It is separated from the civil parish of Little Mitton by the River Ribble, both lie about three miles from the town of Clitheroe. In total, Great and Little Mitton cover less than 2000 acres of the Forest of Bowland, making it the smallest township in the Forest. Historically, the village is part of the West Riding of Yorkshire, but was transferred to Lancashire for administrative purposes on 1 April 1974, under the provisions of the Local Government Act 1972.
Great Mitton has an ancient church, All Hallows, an ancient manor house and a pub, ''The Three Fishes'', where in former times manorial courts were held. A second pub,''The Aspinall Arms'', sits across the Ribble in Little Mitton.
The ancient parish of Mitton took its name from the Old English, being a settlement at the ''mythe'', the confluence of the Hodder and Ribble Rivers.
==History==

The Domesday manor of Mitton encompassed both Great and Little Mitton, straddling lands on both sides of the Ribble. From the late eleventh century, it fell under the Lordship of Bowland, the Lords of Bowland being lords paramount of a Royal Forest and a Liberty of ten manors spanning eight townships and four parishes and which covered an area of almost on the historic borders of Lancashire and Yorkshire. The manors within the Liberty were Slaidburn (Newton-in-Bowland, West Bradford, Grindleton), Knowlmere, Waddington, Easington, Bashall Eaves, Mitton, Withgill (Crook), Leagram, Hammerton and Dunnow (Battersby).〔(Forest of Bowland official website )〕
Mitton was a mesne manor from the early twelfth century. Its first lord, Radulphus le Rus, may have been a scion of the de Lacy family. Descendants of Radulphus assumed the surname ''de Mitton''. In the late thirteenth century, the family adopted the surname ''de Sotheron'', later ''Sherburne'' by marriage, thereby laying the foundation for the dynasty of Shireburne of Stonyhurst. The manor passed out of Shireburne ownership in the fourteenth century but was re-acquired in 1665. With the extinction of the Shireburne male line in 1717, the manor passed to the Hawksworth and finally, Aspinall families.〔Frederick George Ackerley, ''A History of the Parish of Mitton in the West Riding of Yorkshire'' (Aberdeen University Press 1947)〕
The Mitton Hoard of eleven medieval silver coins (or bits of coins) was found to the west of the village near the River Hodder. The coins are now in Clitheroe Castle Museum.〔(Coin hoard BM-193206 ), Finds.org.uk, Retrieved 16 September 2015〕
The manor of Withgill (Crook) lay within the boundaries of the township of Mitton but was small (around 40 acres in 1258). It was held by the ''de Bury'' family until the late fourteenth century. The Singletons held the manor from 1379-1503 after which it passed to the family of Sir William Leyland and finally, the Tyldesleys. The Tyldesleys, leading Jacobites, forfeited the manor for their role in the 1715 Preston Rebellion.〔
The historical Parish of Great Mitton comprised the townships of Old Laund Booth, and Aighton, Bailey and Chaigley in Blackburnshire, and the chapelries of Grindleton and Waddington, and townships of Bashall Eaves, West Bradford in Staincliffe and Mitton itself which straddled the two.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=GENUKI: Great Mitton )
Sir William Addison (1905–1992), historian and author, was born at Milton.〔Kneale, Kenneth (1992); ''Essex Heritage'', Leopards Head Press, pp.3-14. ISBN 0904920232〕〔Morris, Richard; "Sir William Addison (1905-1992) – a retrospective" in ''(Loughton and District Historical Society: Newsletter 165 )'', March/April 2005, pp.3-5〕

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