Country: | England |
Coordinates: | 54.1283°N -1.1409°W |
Official Name: | Crayke |
Static Image Name: | Crayke - Church Hill and the church - geograph.org.uk - 1168566.jpg |
Static Image Caption: | Church Hill and St Cuthbert's Church |
Population: | 410 |
Population Ref: | (2011 census) |
Civil Parish: | Crayke |
Unitary England: | North Yorkshire |
Lieutenancy England: | North Yorkshire |
Region: | Yorkshire and the Humber |
Constituency Westminster: | Thirsk and Malton |
Post Town: | YORK |
Postcode District: | YO61 |
Postcode Area: | YO |
Os Grid Reference: | SE560707 |
Crayke is a village and civil parish in North Yorkshire, England, about east of Easingwold.
The name Crayke is of Brittonic origin,[1] derived from the neo-Brittonic Cumbric crẹ:g, meaning "a crag" or "prominent rock" (Welsh craig). This derivation may refer to the topography associated with the Northumbrian monastery at Crayke.
There is evidence that there has been a settlement here since the times of the seven Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. The village is named in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Crec, part of the Yarlestre hundred and noted as belonging to the Bishop of Durham.
The parish was formerly a detached part of County Durham (until 1844), due to its connection with St Cuthbert and the Diocese of Durham, which owned Crayke Castle.
The seventh-century king Egfrid granted Crayke to the church in 685 to be used by Cuthbert on his visits to York, to which end Cuthbert founded a monastery here. Cuthbert died in 687AD. The monk Aediluulf wrote a poem Carmen de Abbatibus between 803 and 821 about the history of his monastery, and some scholars propose that the monastery, which was in the circle of Lindisfarne, was in Crayke. (For instance, Michael Lapidge in Anglo-Latin Literature 600–899, Hambledon Press, London 1996) According to the chronicler Symeon, the Northumbrian King Aelle appropriated Crayke and used it as his headquarters during the unsuccessful campaign against the Danes in 867. He also reports that when the congregation of St Cuthbert was wandering homeless during the seven-year period 875–882 the monks remained four months at Crayke.[2] In Norman times the Bishops of Durham constructed a castle over the monastic cemetery, though no traces now remain.[2]
Links with Cuthbert and the bishopric of Durham are recognised in the dedication of the 1436 Anglican church to St Cuthbert, and the naming of the pub as the Durham Ox, (an allusion to the foundation myth of Durham).
The village lies within the Thirsk and Malton UK Parliament constituency having previously been in the Vale of York UK Parliament constituency. It is part of the Easingwold electoral division of North Yorkshire Council.[3] It was also within the Stillington ward of Hambleton District Council until 2023.[4]
The Parish Council is made of seven councillors including the Chair.[5]
The village is at an elevation of at its highest point. The nearest settlements are Easingwold to the south-west; Stillington to the south-east; Brandsby to the north-east and Oulston to the north. The River Foss lies just to the east of the village.[4]
According to the 1881 census the population of the village was 501. In the 2001 UK Census the population was recorded as 390, of which 315 were over the age of sixteen and 206 of those were in employment. There are 168 dwellings of which 102 were detached.[6]
The village is served by the Easingwold to York bus route as well as a School Bus to Easingwold School. There is a public house and several local businesses in the village. There is a sports and leisure club on the outskirts where tennis and cricket are played.[7]
Primary education is available in the village at Crayke Primary School. The school lies within the Easingwold School catchment area for Secondary education.[8]
In the Dark Ages, Crayke was home to Echa of Crayke, an eighth century Anglo-Saxon Saint, priest and monk-hermit, known for his holiness, healing[9] and prophetic gifting.[10] According to the York Annals,[11] he died 767AD, and his feast day is 5 May.[12] [13] [14] [15] He is known from the Hagiography of the Secgan Manuscript, and the poem on the Saints of York by Saint Alcuin[16]
See main article: St Cuthbert's Church, Crayke.
There is a church in the village dedicated to St Cuthbert. It was so named following the time of the Danish invasions, when the body of St Cuthbert was unearthed and travelled around the north of England to protect it. The monks rested with his body at Crayke for a time.[2] The present building was erected in 1490 in the Perpendicular style.
In the 19th century there were Wesleyan and Primitive Methodist chapels in the village as well as a Catholic chapel, all now disused.[2]
See main article: Crayke Castle. The village is the site of a 15th-century castle. The Grade I listed building was constructed around 1450.[17]
See main article: Listed buildings in Crayke. There are 28 Grade II listed buildings in the village,[18] including the Brandsby Royal Observer Corps monitoring post that operated from 1964 to 1991 at Zion Hill Farm on Key Lane. Its purpose was to monitor radioactive fallout in the event of a nuclear war. It was built underground to hold a staff of three who could live self-sufficiently for three weeks. It reported to No 20 Group headquarters in York[19] [20] The 17th-century Crayke Manor is Grade II* listed.