Home1797 Edition

HOWDEN

Volume 8 · 138 words · 1797 Edition

a town in the East Riding of Yorkshire, 180 miles from London, stands on the north side of the Ouse, has a market on Saturdays, and four fairs in the year. Here was formerly a collegiate church of five prebendaries, erected in the last century but one; adjacent to which the bishops of Durham, who possess many estates hereabouts with a temporal jurisdiction, have a palace. One of them built a very tall steeple to the church here, whither the inhabitants might retire in case of inundations; to which it is very liable from the great freshes that come down the Ouse sometimes at ebb. This part of the county is from hence called Howdenshire, and is watered by a conflux of several large rivers that fall into the Humber. At Howdenike is a ferry over the Ouse.