Beverley town fair

The Market Town of Beverley in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England, has had a fair since medieval times; in those days the fairs were places for trading goods and animals and also very useful for meeting people and finding news of what was going on elsewhere in the country. Towns were given the right to hold fairs by Royal charter. In the early 12th century Archbishop Thurstan was granted a charter to hold fairs four times a year, each lasting up to five days. Beverley's medieval fairs were:

Beverley town fair

The Market Town of Beverley in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England, has had a fair since medieval times; in those days the fairs were places for trading goods and animals and also very useful for meeting people and finding news of what was going on elsewhere in the country. Towns were given the right to hold fairs by Royal charter. In the early 12th century Archbishop Thurstan was granted a charter to hold fairs four times a year, each lasting up to five days. Beverley's medieval fairs were: