The village name is derived from
Saxon words
Cuc, meaning
cry, and
valt, meaning
wood. The village is mentioned in the
Domesday Book of 1086 as part of the
Yarlestre hundred by the name of
Cucvalt. The lord of the manor at the time of the
Norman Conquest in 1066 was
Kofse but the manor passed to
Hugh, son of Baldric, and thence to Roger de Mowbray. Before 1158 the manor and lands of Coxwold passed to Thomas de Colville. In return for the lands Thomas had to swear allegiance to Roger de Mowbray. Thomas de Colville's estate included the manors of
Yearsley, Coxwold and
Oulston as well as other properties and land in
York,
Thirsk, Everley, Nunwick, Kilburn and Upsland. The Colville shield is proudly displayed at one of the roof intersections in the twelfth-century Norman church in Coxwold. Successive generations of Colvilles held the estate and lands of Coxwold until 1405 when the eighth Thomas Colville was murdered, probably on the instructions of
Richard le Scrope, Archbishop of York, who, in turn, was acting on behalf of
Henry Percy, 1st Earl of Northumberland. The bulk of the Coxwold estate was then granted to the Uhtred-Neville family. In 1603
Sir John Harte, who was born in nearby
Kilburn, North Yorkshire, built a grammar school in the village, which closed in 1894. He was also a Lord Mayor of London. ==Governance==