Uttoxeter (Wotocheshede, Uttokeshather, Utcester, Uttoxater) was probably not a Roman site, although the termination of the name suggests one, and a few remains have been discovered. It formed part of the estates of Algar, earl of Mercia; at the time of the Domesday Survey it was held by the king; later it passed to the Ferrers family and was included in the honour of Tutbury. In the early 12th century Earl Robert de Ferrers constituted Uttoxeter a free borough, and granted to the inhabitants freedom from all tolls, tonnage, poundage and other ex actions. These privileges were confirmed and amplified by a charter, dated August 15, 1251, from William de Ferrers, earl of Derby. Uttoxeter, with the rest of the honour of Tutbury, es cheated to the Crown in 1266 owing to the complicity of Robert Ferrers in the barons' rebellion; it was regranted to Edmund Crouchback, ancestor of the dukes of Lancaster, under whom it became part of the duchy of Lancaster, from which it was not severed until 1625. The Wednesday market, which is still held, was granted by Henry III. to William Ferrers, earl of Derby, together with a fair to be held on the feast of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin (September 8), which was kept up in the 18th century. In 1308 Thomas, earl of Lancaster, obtained the grant of a fair on the vigil, day and morrow of St Mary Magdalene. In Leland's time “ the men of the town used grazing ” in the “ wonderful pastures upon Dove,” and in the 17th and 18th centuries the market was the greatest in that part of England for cattle and provisions; in the 18th century it furnished cheeses to many London cheese mongers. In 1648, on the defeat of the invading Scottish army under the marquis of Hamilton by Cromwell, its leader was captured here by Lambert.
UXBRIDGE, a market town in the Uxbridge parliamentary division of Middlesex, England, 18 m. W. by N. of St Paul's
Cathedral, London, on the river Colne, and on branches of the
Great Western and Metropolitan railways. Pop. of urban
district (1901), 8585. There are breweries, foundries and
engineering works, and a considerable traffic is carried on by
means of the Grand Junction Canal. The town, which is connected
by electric tramway with Hammersmith, London, has
extended considerably in modern times as a residential centre.
The church of St Margaret is Perpendicular, and retains a fine
font in that style, and several ancient monuments.
Uxbridge is an ancient borough, stated to have been one of those originated by Alfred the Great, but it is not mentioned in Domesday. Here negotiations were begun, on the 30th of January 1645, between the commissioners of Charles I. and the parliament, but were broken off on the 22nd of February. A part of the “ Treaty House,” in which they were carried on, remains. In 1647 the parliamentary forces had for some time their headquarters in the town. It remained a garrison town until 1689. It obtained the grant of a market from Henry II.
UXMAL, a deserted city of the Mayas in the state of Yucatan,
Mexico, 20 m. W. of Tikul, a station on the railway between
Merida and Valladolid. The ruins stand on a wooded plain,
and cover an area of a little more than half a mile square,
although fragments are found over a much larger space. Uxmal
is the largest and most important of the deserted cities of
Yucatán, and shows some of the finest specimens of Maya architecture.
The climate is much drier than that of Chiapas, and
the structures are in a better state of preservation than those
of Palenque, but the rank vegetation and the decay of the
wooden lintels over the doorways have broken down many of
the walls. Uxmal was inhabited for some time after the
Spanish conquest, but perhaps only by a remnant of a population
once much larger. The neighbourhood is now very
unhealthy, and it may be presumed that the process of depopulation,
caused by increasingly unhealthy conditions and diminishing
sources of food supply, was gradual. There are no streams
near the ruins, and the water-supply was derived from cisterns
and from a few pools now filled with soil and vegetation. A
rather soft limestone was used in the buildings, but the locality
of the quarries has not been discovered. The walls are commonly
about 3 ft. thick, in some cases much thicker, and the
stones were set in a whitish mortar. Stone implements were
used. The outer surfaces of the walls are usually divided by
a horizontal moulding into two unequal zones, the lower one
plain with a band of sculptured ornaments at the base, and the
upper elaborately sculptured. The interior walls were generally
plastered and rarely ornamented. There are no windows
but large doorways. The jambs were of dressed stone, usually
plain, and the longer lintels were of zapote wood; some of
them, where protected from the weather, are still to be seen,
sometimes covered with inscriptions. The buildings are
rectangular in shape, long and narrow, divided usually into two
ranges of rooms. They are generally arranged in groups of
four, enclosing a quadrangular court, and sometimes singly on
massive eminences. The interiors are cut up into numerous
small rooms by transverse partitions, while numerous beam holes
and dumb-sheaves indicate other divisions. The rooms
are covered by acutely pointed vaults, the stones forming the
sides of the vault being bevelled to the angle, and the apex being
covered by capstones covering spaces of one to two feet. The
spaces between the vaults are filled with solid masonry, and
above all is the roof covering, also of masonry, which is sometimes
surmounted with an ornamental roof-comb. The buildings
stand upon raised terraces, or upon truncated pyramids,
approached by broad stairways, usually of cut stone.
There are five principal buildings or groups—the Temple of the Magician, Nunnery Quadrangle, House of the Turtles, House of the Pigeons and Governor's Palace. There are other structures and groups, smaller and more dilapidated. One of them, standing immediately S. of the Nunnery, consists of two parallel walls only: it is usually described as the ball-court, or gymnasium, a structure common to most Maya cities. The Temple of the Magician crowns an unusually steep pyramid 240 180 ft. at the base and 80 ft. high. It has three rooms, and a smaller temple is built against the upper western side of the pyramid. A broad steep stairway ascends to the summit platform on the E., and a narrower stairway to the lower temple on the W. The west front is filled with remarkable figures and designs, including the lattice work common in Uxmal. The Nunnery Quadrangle consists of four large rectangular independent buildings, enclosing a quadrangular court, the whole occupying a terrace over 300 ft. square at the base and upwards of 15 ft. above the level of the plain. The buildings resemble each other in the arrangement of their rooms, and their elaborately ornamented facades face inwards upon the court. The division of the buildings into numerous small rooms is understood to signify that they were used as communal habitations, possibly of priestly orders. The Governor's Palace, standing upon a triple terrace S. of the Nunnery, is, according to W. H. Holmes, “ the most important single structure of its class in Yucatan, and for that matter in America." It is 320 ft. long, 40 ft. wide and 25 or 26 ft. high, divided into a long central and two end sections, separated by recesses and two transverse archways about 25 ft. long, 10 ft. wide and 20 ft. high. These archways were subsequently blocked, and may have been intended originally as portals to a quadrangle which was never built. The upper zone of the exterior walls is about 10 ft. wide, exclusive of the mouldings and ornamental frieze, and its total length of 720 ft. is crowded with sculptures, in which there are three principal motives—the mask, the fret and the lattice. The projecting snouts in the line of masks forming the upper part of this zone are a peculiar feature of Uxmal ornamentation. The House of the Turtles is a comparatively small structure near the N.W. corner of the Governor's Palace. It has the same features found in the other structures except for a line of sculptured turtles on the mouldings of the frieze. Immediately S.W. of the Governor's Palace is a huge truncated pyramid, 200 300 ft. at the base and 60 to 70 ft. high. Beyond this is another large quadrangular group known as the House of the Pigeons. It resembles the Nunnery Quadrangle, except that the northern building carries a peculiar roof-comb of colossal size, running its entire length and rising to a height of about 16 ft. The base of this comb is 4 ft. high, capped by a moulding and perforated by over 50 openings. Above this the comb is divided into nine sections rising by large steps to the apex, each pierced by 30 or more openings, like an immense dovecote. Projecting stones suggest that they were built to carry statues or figures like the roof-combs of Palenque.
UZ, JOHANN PETER (1720–1796), German poet, was born at
Ansbach on the 3rd of October 1720. He studied law, 1739–43, at the university of Halle, where he associated with the poets Johann Ludwig Gleim (q.v.) and Johann Nikolaus Götz (q.v.), and in conjunction with the latter translated the odes of Anacreon (1746). In 1748 Uz was appointed unpaid secretary to the Justizcollegium, an office he held for twelve years; in 1763 he became assessor to the imperial court of justice at Nuremberg, in 1790 was made a judge and, on the annexation of