Market Bosworth is a tiny market town and civil church in western Leicestershire, England. At the 2001 Census, it had a population of 1,906, enhancing to 2,097 at the 2011 census. In 1974, Market Bosworth Rural District combined with Hinckley Rural Area to create the district of Hinckley and also Bosworth. Building work at the old Cattle Market and various other sites has exposed evidence of settlement on capital given that the Bronze Age. Remains of a Roman vacation home have actually been found on the east side of Barton Road. Bosworth as an Anglo-Saxon town days from the 8th century. Prior To the Norman Conquest of 1066, there were two manors at Bosworth one belonging to an Anglo-Saxon knight called Fernot, as well as some sokemen. Adhering to the Norman occupation, as taped in the Domesday Book of 1086, both the Anglo-Saxon manors as well as the town belonged to the lands granted by William the Conqueror to the Count of Meulan from Normandy, Robert de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Leicester. Ultimately, the village passed by marriage dowry to the English branch of the French House of Harcourt. King Edward I provided an imperial charter to Sir William Harcourt enabling a market to be held every Wednesday. The town took the name Market Bosworth from 12 May 1285, and on today came to be a "town" by common definition. Both oldest structures in Bosworth, St. Peter's Church and the Red Lion club, were constructed throughout the 14th century. The Battle of Bosworth occurred to south of the community in 1485 as the end of the world in the Wars of the Roses between your house of Lancaster and also the House of York, which caused the death of King Richard III. Following the exploration of the remains of Richard III in Leicester during 2012, on Sunday 22 March 2015 the king's funeral cortège gone through the town on its way to Leicester Cathedral for his reburial. This occasion is now memorialized with a flooring plaque before the war memorial in the town square.