Etymology Rutland is referred to as
Roteland in the
Domesday Book (completed in 1086). The name means "land belonging to Rōta", with
Rōta being an
Old English personal name that meant 'the pleasant or cheerful one'.
Early history – 1974 Earl of Rutland and
Duke of Rutland are titles in the
peerage of England held in the Manners family, derived from the historic county of Rutland. The Earl of Rutland was elevated to the status of
Duke in 1703 and the titles were merged. The family seat is
Belvoir Castle, Leicestershire. The office of
High Sheriff of Rutland was instituted in 1129, and there has been a
Lord Lieutenant of Rutland since at least 1559.
Oakham Castle was built –1190 and is "one of the nation’s best-preserved Norman buildings" and is a
Grade I listed building. By the 19th century it had been divided into the
hundreds of
Alstoe, East Rutland, Martinsley, Oakham and Wrandike. Rutland covered parts of three
poor law unions and
rural sanitary districts (RSDs): those of Oakham, Uppingham and Stamford. The
registration county of Rutland contained the entirety of Oakham and Uppingham RSDs, which included several parishes in Leicestershire and Northamptonshire – the eastern part in Stamford RSD was included in the Lincolnshire registration county. Under the Poor Laws, Oakham Union workhouse was built in 1836–37 at a site to the north-east of the town, with room for 100 paupers. The building later operated as the Catmose Vale Hospital, and now forms part of the
Oakham School.In 1894, under the
Local Government Act 1894, the rural sanitary districts were partitioned along county boundaries to form three
rural districts. The part of Oakham and Uppingham RSDs in Rutland formed the
Oakham Rural District and
Uppingham Rural District, with the two parishes from Oakham RSD in Leicestershire becoming part of the
Melton Mowbray Rural District, the nine parishes of Uppingham RSD in Leicestershire becoming the
Hallaton Rural District, and the six parishes of Uppingham RSD in Northamptonshire becoming
Gretton Rural District. Meanwhile, that part of Stamford RSD in Rutland became the
Ketton Rural District.
Oakham Urban District was created from Oakham Rural District in 1911. It was subsequently abolished in 1974.
Plans for reorganisation Rutland was included in the "East Midlands General Review Area" of the 1958–67
Local Government Commission for England. Draft recommendations would have seen Rutland split, with Ketton Rural District going along with
Stamford to a new administrative county of
Cambridgeshire, and the western part added to
Leicestershire. The final proposals were less radical and instead proposed that Rutland become a single rural district within the administrative county of Leicestershire. There was fierce local opposition to the plans, with even the local
Conservative Party branch campaigning against it; the campaign included successful
publicity stunts such as mounting a pretend battleship called HMS
Rutland on a lorry and shooting fireworks at
the offices of
Leicestershire County Council, where the commissioners were based. On 1 August 1963 the
Minister of Housing and Local Government,
Sir Keith Joseph, announced that the proposed merger with Leicestershire would not be implemented, citing Rutland's case as "unique", while the opposition alleged that cancelling the merger was a purely political consideration seeking to appease
Tory voters in Rutland who did not want to see their county lose its status. The historian Alexander Hutton suggests that the 1962 by-elections in
Orpington (where the
Liberal Party successfully campaigned as a
protest vote against local government reorganisation) and
Leicester North East (where Conservative activists from Rutland and Leicestershire refused to campaign, instead endorsing the Liberals) caused the Conservative government to reverse their decision regarding Rutland. and despite counties no longer being required for postal purposes, Royal Mail agreed to re-create a postal county of Rutland in 2007. This was achieved in January 2008 by amending the former postal county for all of the Oakham (
LE15) post town and a small part of the
Market Harborough (LE16) post town. ==Geography==