- Catterick, North Yorkshire
Infobox UK place
official_name= Catterick
country= England
static_
static_image_caption = Catterick Village Green
region= Yorkshire and the Humber
population= 2,743 (2001)
os_grid_reference= SE2497
latitude= 54.372
longitude= -1.623
post_town=
postcode_area=
postcode_district=
dial_code=
constituency_westminster=
civil_parish=
shire_district=Richmondshire
shire_county=North Yorkshire Catterick, sometimes Catterick Village to distinguish it from the nearby
Catterick Garrison , is avillage inNorth Yorkshire . It dates back to Roman times, when Cataractonium was a Romanfort protecting the crossing of the Great North Road andDere Street over theRiver Swale .Ptolemy 's Geographia of c.150 mentions it as a landmark to locate the 24thclime . [Stevenson, Edward Luther. Trans. and ed. 1932. Claudius Ptolemy: The Geography. New York Public Library. Reprint: Dover, 1991, Latinized English translation, Book II Chapter 2, web edition at http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Periods/Roman/_Texts/Ptolemy/2/2*.html#Caturactonium retrieved on August 16, 2006]Catterick is thought to be the site of the
Battle of Catraeth (c.598 ) mentioned in thepoem "Y Gododdin ". This was a historic battle between Celtic British orBrythonic kingdoms and the Anglo-Saxon kingdom ofBernicia . [Ford, David Nash 1998 "Early British Kingdoms" - "Timeline of the Early British Kingdoms 410 AD-598 AD" retrieved from http://britannia.com/history/ebk/ebktime1.html on August 16, 2006] Catraeth was then a seat of the British kingdom ofRheged .In later times, it prospered as a coaching town where travellers up the Great North Road would stop overnight and refresh themselves and their
horse s; today's Angel Inn was once acoaching inn .Saint Anne 's Church overlooks the village and has Norman roots.At the 2001
Census , Catterick Village had 2,743 residents, most of whom work in the adjacent Garrison, in farming, or in the local towns of Richmond,Darlington ,Northallerton or onTeesside . PreviouslyRAF Catterick the airfield to the south of the village was transferred to the Army and is now Marne Barracks, named after the site of two significant battles ofWorld War I .The £1m A1 bypass was opened in 1959 by [John Cavendish, 5th Baron Chesham|Lord Chesham, the Joint
Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Transport .Etymology
"Cataractonium" looks like a Latin/Greek mixture meaning "place of a waterfall", but on the
Ptolemy world map it is spelt Κατουρακτονιον, which looks like Celtic for " [place of] battle ramparts".References
External links
* [http://www.cattericksundaymarket.co.uk Sunday Market]
* [http://www.catterickgolfclub.co.uk Golf club]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.