Wharram Percy
Just one of the local areas worth a ride out to see when you are visiting Bridlington.
Free Bridlington Guide
Get your FREE Bridlington Guide full of information on places to visit and things to do in Bridlington plus full Bridlington accommodation listings. Order your copy by clicking here...
Cost Effective Advertising
Is your business worth 14p a day to promote?
- Full page to display all your information
- Display up to 10 images
- Self management facility
- Change it as often as you like
- Free location map
- Link to your website
- Views counter
- Direct access to your target market
- Access to post on our Facebook wall
- It's subsidised
- Over 17 million hits in 2012
- Provides discounts for new websites
- Click here for more information
- Click here to signup
and...
It's only £1.00 per week
Wharram Percy
25 Miles from Bridlington
Wharram Percy is a deserted medieval village (DMV) site on the western edge of the chalk Wolds in North Yorkshire, England.
The site is about one mile south of Wharram-le-Street and is clearly signposted from the B1248 Beverley to Malton road. grid reference SE858646.
Wharram Percy is perhaps the best-known deserted medieval village in the whole of England, although there are several others which are in a similarly good state of preservation.
The reason for its celebrity is that it was researched each summer by combined teams of archaeologists, historians and even botanists, from circa 1950 to 1990 following its identification in 1948 by Professor Maurice Beresford of the University of Leeds.
It is mentioned in the 1086 Domesday Book as Warran or Warron.
Although the site has apparently been settled since pre-historic times, the village seems to have been most active from the tenth to the twelfth centuries.
The Black Death of 1348–49 does not seem to have played a significant part in the desertion of Wharram Percy although the large fall in population in the country as a whole at that time must have made relocation to a less remote spot more likely.
The villagers of Wharram Percy seem to have suffered instead from changes in prices and wages in the 15th century, which gave pastoral farming (particularly of sheep) an advantage over traditional cereal farming.
The village was finally abandoned in the early 16th century when the lord of the manor turned out the last few families and knocked down their homes to make room for extra sheep pasturage.
Heading 1
This is an example of the content for a specific image in the Nivo slider. Lorem ipsum not available so I'll just type a bunch of stuff....
Heading 2
This is an example of the content for a specific image in the Nivo slider. Lorem ipsum not available so I'll just type a bunch of stuff....
Heading 3
This is an example of the content for a specific image in the Nivo slider. Lorem ipsum not available so I'll just type a bunch of stuff....
Heading 4
This is an example of the content for a specific image in the Nivo slider. Lorem ipsum not available so I'll just type a bunch of stuff....
To open the above advertisements in a new window simply right click on the ad and select "open in a new window"

















