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Volume 19, No. 531, January 28, 1832


Various / 2008-06-15 00:00:00

EBOOK THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE ***







THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.
VOL. XIX. NO. 531.] SATURDAY, JANUARY 28, 1832. [PRICE 2d
* * * * *

[Illustration: PONTEFRACT CASTLE, 1648.]

PONTEFRACT CASTLE.

Pontrefact, a place of considerable note in English history, is situated
about two miles south-west from Ferrybridge, nine miles nearly east from
Wakefield, and fifteen miles north-west from Doncaster, in Yorkshire. The
origin of the town is unknown; and the etymology of its name has been a
matter of dispute, in which figures a monkish legend ascribing the name of
Ponsfractus, or Pontefract, to the breaking of a bridge, and the fall of
many persons into the river Aire, who were miraculously saved by St.
William, Archbishop of York. The river Ouse and the city of York, however,
put in a stronger claim as the scene of this miracle, and unfortunately
for Pontefract, the town is so named in charters of fifty-three years'
date before the miracle is pretended to have been performed.
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