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County Borough of Leeds

City of Leeds
County Borough of Leeds
Leedstownhall.jpg
Leeds Town Hall
Leeds within the West Riding in 1971.png
Leeds shown within the West Riding in 1971
Area
 • 1911 21,593 acres (8,738 ha)
 • 1931 38,105 acres (15,421 ha)
 • 1961 40,612 acres (16,435 ha)
Population
 • 1911 445,550
 • 1931 482,809
 • 1961 510,676
Density
 • 1911 21/acre
 • 1931 13/acre
 • 1961 13/acre
History
 • Origin Leeds ancient borough
 • Created 1836
 • Abolished 1974
 • Succeeded by City of Leeds (metropolitan district)
Status Municipal borough (1835–1889)
County borough (1889–1974)
City (1893–1974)
 • HQ Leeds
 • Motto PRO REGE ET LEGE
Leeds old arms.png
Coat of arms in use until 1921

The County Borough of Leeds, and its predecessor, the Municipal Borough of Leeds, was a local government district in the West Riding of Yorkshire, England, from 1835 to 1974. Its origin was the ancient borough of Leeds, which was reformed by the Municipal Corporations Act 1835. In 1889, when West Riding County Council was formed, Leeds became a county borough outside the administrative county of the West Riding; and in 1893 the borough gained city status. The borough was extended a number of times, expanding from 21,593 acres (8,738 ha) in 1911 to 40,612 acres (16,435 ha) in 1961; adding in stages the former area of Roundhay, Seacroft, Shadwell and Middleton parishes and gaining other parts of adjacent districts. In 1971 Leeds was the fifth largest county borough by population in England. The county borough was abolished in 1974 and replaced with the larger City of Leeds, a metropolitan district of West Yorkshire.

The Borough of Leeds was created in 1207, when Maurice Paynel, Lord of the Manor, granted a charter to the inhabitants of the town of Leeds. They were created "burgesses", and were given the right to hold half an acre of land, trade as they liked, and transport their goods by land or water, subject to tolls and restrictions paid to the manor. The only officer of the borough was a praetor, appointed annually at the Feast of Pentecost by the Lord of the Borough. The praetor had the duty of administering justice and collecting fines and other revenues. The borough formed only a small area adjacent to a crossing of the River Aire, between the old settlement centred on Leeds Parish Church to the east and the manor house and mills to the west. The borough consisted of a single street with approximately thirty burgage plots. By the seventeenth century the title of praetor had been abandoned in favour of the more customary "bailiff", but otherwise the government of the town remained in the form introduced in the thirteenth century. An enquiry into the administration of local charities in 1620 disclosed that many of the funds were diverted by the bailiff for his private use. This, and other irregularities, led the inhabitants of Leeds to petition Charles I for a charter of incorporation.


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