WARWICK, a parish comprising the townships of Aglionby and Warwick, in CUMBERLAND ward, and the township of Little Corby, in ESKDALE ward, county of CUMBERLAND, and containing 518 inhabitants, of which number, 257 are in the township of Warwick, 4 miles (E. by N.) from Carlisle. The living is a perpetual curacy, annexed to that of Wetheral, in the archdeaconry and diocese of Carlisle. The church, dedicated to St. Leonard, is built of stone, in the Norman style of architecture, with a semicircular east end> and appears to have been formerly much larger. The village is pleasantly situated on the western bank of the river Eden, which is crossed by a bridge of four arches, near the base of an eminence, on which are the remains of trenches, probably thrown up to guard the pass during the border feuds. Besides its ecclesiastical union with Wetheral, the two parishes join in the maintenance of the poor, the workhouse being at Wetheral. A building for a Sunday school was erected by the late Thomas Parker, Esq. The parish is bounded on the north by the river Eden, and on the west by the Irthing; and, from the large earthworks still remaining, is supposed to be the site of the ancient Virotidum, where the sixth cohort of the Nervii was stationed.