Toponymy Lathom was recorded as Latune in the
Domesday Book in 1086, Lathum in 1200, and Lathom in 1223 after which it was the usual spelling. It derives from the
dative plural of
Old Norse hlaða, a barn. Lathom thus means
at the barns.
Manor In 1066 the manor of Lathom was the most important of 17 manors held by Uctred, an Anglo-Danish landowner. These manors were set up by
Æthelstan in the 10th century. By 1189 Robert Fitzhenry de Lathom possessed lands throughout south Lancashire, extending to
Flixton in the barony of
Manchester. Siward son of Dunning held the township in
thanage in the reign of
Henry II. Robert de Lathom, in the reign of
Edward I was granted the right to hold a market and an annual fair. Robert Lathom founded
Burscough Priory in or before 1189.
Thomas Stanley, 1st Earl of Derby entertained Henry VII in his castle at Lathom. The present West Wing of Lathom House gives a hint of the importance of Lathom and the Stanley family who became the
earls of Derby. The village grew around the castle at Lathom.
Lathom House Lathom is the location of Lathom House built in the
Middle Ages, seat of the de Lathom and Stanley families, twice besieged during the
English Civil War and subsequently bought by Sir Thomas Bootle who restored the ancient mansion. It passed through his niece to Richard Wilbraham and their son,
Lord Skelmersdale. The main block was demolished in 1925.
Pilkington European Technical Centre Pilkington, the European Division of
Nippon Sheet Glass Group, has its European Technical Centre in Lathom. The site was formerly the main R&D facility for Pilkington plc. ==Governance==