Framwelgate
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Framwelgate | |
Framwelgate shown within County Durham |
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OS grid reference | |
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District | City of Durham |
Shire county | County Durham |
Region | North East |
Constituent country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Police | Durham |
Fire | County Durham and Darlington |
Ambulance | North East |
European Parliament | North East England |
List of places: UK • England • County Durham |
Framwelgate (now more commonly Framwellgate) is an area of Durham, County Durham, England. It is adjoined by Crossgate, North End, Framwellgate Moor and the River Wear.
The 'Borough of Framwelgate' grew up following the construction of a bridge (Framwellgate Bridge) over the River Wear by Bishop Flambard in 1121. The roads Millburngate and Framwelgate became part the main route between Durham and the North. The area was home to wealthy Durham merchants and artisans until the 17th century. By the 19th century much of the area had developed into slum housing with coal mining occurring to the north of Framwelgate. These houses were demolished during the 1930s and residents moved to the newly built Sherburn Road Estate in Gilesgate.
Framwellgate is believed to have been named from a well at the head of the old street. This was connected to a pant in the Market Place. Durham City Council continues to appoint an honorary Pant Master. Above the well the road continues as Framwellgate Peth.
Framwellgate Peth continues towards Dryburn, Durham's place of execution until the construction of Durham Gaol. Saint John Boste was executed here in 1594 for being a Roman Catholic priest. While name Dryburn is popularly claimed to derive from a stream that dried up following the execution of a Jesuit or a corruption of Tyburn (London's place of execution), Victor Watts has shown the name, deriving from the middle English for 'dry stream' was being used by at least the 14th century.
A mediaeval leper hospital, St. Leonard's is believed to have been sited just south of Dryburn until its demolition in 1652/53
Prior to the 1974 local government re-organisation the Municipal Borough covering central Durham was styled "The City of Durham and Framwelgate".
[edit] References
- Watts, Victor. A Dictionary of County Durham Place-Names. English Place-Name Society, Nottingham, 2002. ISBN 0-904889-65-3