(Redirected from Burghs)
A 'Burgh' (
pronounced: ) is an corporate entity in
Scotland, usually a
town. The term has been in use since the
12th century, when
David I created the first
Royal burghs. Recognition of burgh status today, however, has little more than ceremonial value.
History of burghs
The first burgh was
Haddington,
East Lothian. By 1130, David I had established burghs at
Stirling,
Dunfermline,
Perth and
Scone, as well as
Edinburgh.
Burghs had rights to representation in the
Parliament of Scotland. Under the
Acts of Union of 1707 many became
parliamentary burghs, represented in the
Parliament of Great Britain.
Under the
Reform Acts of 1832, 32 years after the merger of the Parliament of Great Britain into the
Parliament of the United Kingdom, the boundaries of burghs for parliamentary
elections ceased to be necessarily their boundaries for other purposes.
When Scottish
county councils were created under the
Local Government (Scotland) Act 1889 burghs were already important in the
local government of Scotland. County councils and burgh councils were both abolished under the
Local Government (Scotland) Act 1973, which created a new system of
regions and districts and
island council areas.
Features of Burghs
The titular head of a burgh is called a
Provost. Most
royal burghs retain the title for ceremonial purposes, with the notable exception of the . Under the Provost are
magistrates or
baillies who both acted as councillors, and in the enforcement of laws. As well as general tasks, they often had specific tasks such as inspecting wine, or ale, or other products sold at market. The common citizen of a burgh was a
Burgess (''pl. Burgessess''). These were
freemen, a class which did not include dependants, servants and so on, though freemen might not be wealthy.
Early Burghs were granted the power to trade, which allowed them to control trade until the 19th century. the population of Burgesses could be roughly divided between
merchants and
craftsmen, and the tensions between the interests of the two classes was often a feature of the cities. Craftsmen were usually organised into
guilds. Merchants also had a guild, but many merchants did not belong to it, and it would be run by a small group of the most powerful merchants. The class of merchants included all traders, from stall-holders and pack-men to shop-holders and traders of considerable wealth.
Types of Burgh
There are several types of burgh, including;
★
Royal burgh, founded by Royal charter.
★
Burgh of regality, granted to a nobleman or "lord of regality".
★
Burgh of barony, granted to a tenant-in chief, with narrower powers.
★
Parliamentary burgh or
Burgh constituency, a type of
parliamentary constituency.
★
Police burgh, a burgh operating a "police system" of town government.
Etymology
As used in this article, the
word ''burgh'' is derived from
Scots language and refers to corporate entities whose
legality is peculiar to Scotland. (Scottish
law was protected and preserved as distinct from laws of
England under the
Acts of Union of 1707.) Pronunciation is the same as the
English word ''
borough'', which is a near
cognate of the Scots word.
The word has cognates, or near cognates, in other
Germanic languages. For example, ''
burg'' in
German, and ''
borg'' in both
Danish and
Swedish. The equivalent word is also to be found in
Frisian,
Dutch,
Norwegian, and
Icelandic. In southern England, the word took the form ''bury'', as in Canterbury (Stewart 1967:193).
The Scots language ''burgh'' and the English language ''borough'' are derived from the
Old English language word ''
burh'' (whose dative singular and nominative/accusative plural form ''byrig'' sometimes underlies modern place-names, and which had dialectal variants including ''
burg''; it was also sometimes confused with ''beorh'', ''beorg'', 'mound, hill', on which see Hall 2001, 69-70). The
Old English word was originally used for a fortified town or proto-
castle (eg at
Dover Castle or
Burgh Castle) and was related to the verb ''beorgan'' (cf. Dutch and German ''bergen''), meaning "to keep, save, make secure". In
German '' means ''
castle'', though so many towns grew up around castles that it almost came to mean ''
city'', and is incorporated into many
placenames, such as
Hamburg and
Strasbourg),
A number of other
European languages have cognate words which were borrowed from the
Germanic languages during the
Middle Ages, including ''brog'' in
Irish, ''bwr'' or ''bwrc'', meaning "wall, rampart" in
Welsh, ''bourg'' in
French, ''
borgo'' in
Italian, and ''burgo'' in
Spanish (hence the place-name
Burgos).
The most obviously derivative words are
burgher in English and in German (both literally ''
citizen'', with connotations of
middle-class in English and other
Germanic languages). Also related are the words ''
bourgeois'' and ''
belfry'' (both from the
French), and ''
burglar''. More distantly, it is related to words meaning ''
hill'' or ''
mountain'' in a number of languages (
cf. the second element of ''
iceberg'').
[1] [2]
Burgh as an element in placenames
Burgh is commonly used as a
suffix in place names, in Scotland and other countries to which Scots
emigrated:
★
Edinburgh
★
Fraserburgh
★
Helensburgh
★
Jedburgh
★
Leverburgh
★
Maryburgh
★
Musselburgh
★
Newburgh
★
Roxburgh
★
Williamsburgh (Scotland and the United States)
★
Kingsburgh (Scotland and South Africa)
★
Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania,
United States
★
Plattsburgh,
New York, United States
★
Edinburgh,
Indiana, United States
And as a placename on its own, in the
West Germanic countries:
★
Burgh, Renfrewshire, Scotland
★
Burgh (Netherlands) - a town in the
Netherlands in the municipality of
Schouwen-Duiveland.
★
Burgh, Suffolk, England
★
Burgh by Sands, Cumbria, England (''pronounced Bruff by Sands'')
★
Burgh Castle, Norfolk, England
★
Burgh le Marsh, Lincolnshire, England
★
Burgh on Bain, Lincolnshire, England
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Burgh Island, Devon, England
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Burgh next Aylsham, Norfolk, England
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Burgh St Margaret, Norfolk, England
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Burgh St Peter, Suffolk, England
See also
★
List of burghs in Scotland
★
List of Royal Burghs
★
Five Burghs
★
Borough
References
★ Hall, Alaric,
'Old MacDonald had a Fyrm, eo, eo, y: Two Marginal Developments of < eo > in Old and Middle English', Quaestio: Selected Proceedings of the Cambridge Colloquium in Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic, 2 (2001), 60-90.
★
Stewart, George R. (1967) ''Names on the Land.'' Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company.