Roman The
Romans built a settlement and named it
Calcaria from the
Latin word for
lime, reflecting the importance of the area's
limestone geology as a natural resource for
quarrying, an industry which continues and has contributed to many notable buildings including
York Minster. Calcaria was an important staging post that grew at the crossing of the River Wharfe on the road to
Eboracum (
York).
Anglo-Saxon and medieval The suffix of the
Anglo-Saxon name Tadcaster is derived from the borrowed
Latin word
castra meaning 'military camp' (the plural of
castrum, fort), although the
Angles and Saxons used the term for any walled Roman settlement. Tadcaster is first mentioned in the
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, where it appears as
Táda, referring to the place where
King Harold assembled his army and fleet before entering York and proceeding onwards to the
Battle of Stamford Bridge in 1066. The place-name probably means 'Tata's fort' after an unknown Anglo-Saxon landowner. The town is mentioned in the
Domesday Book of 1086 as "Tatecastre". The record reads: Two Manors. In Tatecastre, Dunstan and Turchil had eight carucates of land for geld, where four ploughs may be. Now, William de Parci has three ploughs and 19 villanes and 11 bordars having four ploughs, and two mills of ten shillings (annual value). Sixteen acres of meadow are there. The whole manors, five quaranteens in length, and five in breadth. In King Edward's time they were worth forty shillings; now one hundred shillings. In the 11th century
William de Percy established a
motte-and-bailey fortress re-using Roman stone. The earthwork remains of this castle, including the
motte (known as Castle Hill) can still be seen adjacent to the parish church and bridge. The castle was abandoned in the early-12th century and was briefly re-fortified with cannon emplacements during the
Civil War. The street plan south of the site reflects the shape of the former bailey. Before 1186,
Matilda de Percy, the wife of
William de Beaumont, 3rd Earl of Warwick gave the hospital here to
Sawley Abbey (now in Lancashire, previously in West Yorkshire). The original river-crossing was probably a
ford near the current bridge, followed by a wooden bridge. Around 1240, the first stone bridge was constructed, possibly from stone reclaimed from the castle. The current bridge was constructed on the foundations of the original (1699), although it has been substantially modified in 1736 and 1753. Then in 1791,
John Carr built another bridge immediately above the 1699 bridge effectively extending it to twice the width it was before. Historically, the Wharfe marked the boundary between the
West Riding and the
Ainsty of York.
Civil War During the
English Civil War, on the morning of Tuesday 7 December 1642 the
Battle of Tadcaster, a
skirmish, between
Sir Thomas Fairfax's
Parliamentarian forces and
Sir Thomas Glemham's Royalist army took place on and around
Tadcaster Bridge.
Market A market has been held since 1270, when
Henry de Percy obtained a royal charter from
King Henry III to hold "a market and fair at his manor of Tadcaster". The ancient market place is at the junction of Kirkgate and Bridge Street. A stone base, believed to have been part of the original market cross, stood on Westgate where the Tadcaster War Memorial now stands. The present-day market is held on Thursdays in the car park of Tadcaster Social Club on St Josephs Street. ==Population==