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・ Pontiac Catholic High School
・ Pontiac Central High School
・ Pontiac Chieftain
・ Pontiac City Hall and Fire Station
・ Pontiac Club de Mer
・ Pontiac Community Consolidated School District 429
・ Pontiac Continuing Education Centre
・ Pontiac Correctional Center
・ Pontiac Custom S
・ Pontiac Executive
・ Pontiac fever
・ Pontiac Fiero
・ Pontiac Firebird
・ Pontiac Firebird (third generation)
・ Pontedeva
Pontefract
・ Pontefract (rugby league)
・ Pontefract (UK Parliament constituency)
・ Pontefract and Castleford (UK Parliament constituency)
・ Pontefract and Castleford by-election, 1978
・ Pontefract and District Girls High School
・ Pontefract Baghill railway station
・ Pontefract Barracks
・ Pontefract bus station
・ Pontefract by-election, 1868
・ Pontefract by-election, 1872
・ Pontefract by-election, 1919
・ Pontefract by-election, 1941
・ Pontefract by-election, 1962
・ Pontefract cake


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Pontefract : ウィキペディア英語版
Pontefract

Pontefract is a historic market town in West Yorkshire, England, near the A1 (or Great North Road) and the M62 motorway. Historically part of the West Riding of Yorkshire, it is one of the five towns in the metropolitan borough of the City of Wakefield and has a population of 28,250.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/rel/census/census-2001-key-statistics/urban-areas-in-england-and-wales/urban-areas-in-england-and-wales-ks01-usual-resident-population.xls )〕 Pontefract's motto is ''Post mortem patris pro filio'', Latin for "After the death of the father, support the son", a reference to English Civil War Royalist sympathies.〔Padgett 170〕
==Origins of the name 'Pontefract'==

At the end of the 11th century, the modern township of Pontefract consisted of two distinct and separate localities known as Tanshelf and Kirkby.〔Eric Houlder, Ancient Roots North: When Pontefract Stood on the Great North Road, (Pontefract: Pontefract Groups Together, 2012) p.7.〕 The 11th century historian, Orderic Vitalis, recorded that, in 1069, William the Conqueror travelled across Yorkshire to put down an uprising which had sacked York, but that, upon his journey to the city, he discovered that the crossing of the River Aire at what is modern-day Pontefract had been blockaded by a group of local Anglo-Scandinavian insurgents, who had broken the bridge and held the opposite bank in force.〔Orderic Vitalis, ''Ecclesiastical History of England'', 2:27.〕 Such a crossing point would have been important in the town's early days, providing access between Pontefract and other settlements to the north and east, such as York.〔Ayto & Crofton〕 Historians believe that, in all probability, it is this historical event which gives the township of Pontefract its modern name. The name "Pontefract" originates from the Latin for "broken bridge", formed of the elements pons ('bridge') and fractus ('broken'). Pontefract was not recorded in the 1086 ''Domesday Book'', but it was noted as Pontefracto in 1090, four years after the Domesday survey.〔Frank Barlow, William I and the Norman Conquest (London: The English Universities Press, 1965) p.95. David Crouch, The Normans: The History of a Dynasty (London: Hambledon and London, 2002) p.105〕

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