British toponymy

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British toponymy is the study of British place names (on the mainland, Shetland, Orkney, the Channel Islands and other associated places), their origins and trends in naming. It is different from the study of etymology, which is concerned mainly with the origin of the words themselves.

British toponymy is rich, complex and difficult. Moreover it is extremely inexact and non-empirical. Many British forms and names have been corrupted over the years through being occupied by many different groups of people speaking different languages with similar words meaning different things. In some cases words used in place names are derived from languages that are extinct, and of which there are no extant known definitions. There are also many compounds between two separate languages from separate periods.

There are many other languages which have shaped and informed the nomenclature of the United Kingdom: various Celtic languages (including Brythonic, Gaelic (Old Irish), Scots Gaelic, Welsh, Cornish and Pictish), Latin, Anglo-Saxon, Old Norse, Norman French, modern French and a few others besides.

Sometimes, identifying the origins and meaning of a name is easy. The modern form of the name may reflect its original meaning. A good example of this is Box Hill, Surrey which is what it says it is: a hill upon which box once grew. Sometimes it is not: Beadlam, North Yorkshire (grid reference SE 654 846) has nothing to do with the lunatic asylum (Bedlam, from Bethlehem) of earlier times, but is from Anglo-Saxon (æt) bōðlum = "at the buildings", or its Old Norse equivalent[1].

Back-formation is the process whereby names are derived from one another in the opposite direction to that which one would expect - for example rivers that had the original names forgotten, so the river is named after the town or valley rather than vice versa. The river running through Rochdale became known as the "Roch" through this process.

Some names originally referred to a specific natural feature such as a river, ford or hill, that can no longer be identified. The name of this natural feature survives because it was subsequently applied to a nearby settlement. For example, Whichford (Warwickshire) means "the ford on the Hwicce", but the location of the ford is lost[2].

Contents

[edit] Pre-Celtic, Celtic and Gaelic names

The oldest and most ancient of place names tend to be rivers, and are assumed to descend from Old European pre-Celtic languages (of which nothing is known), and must be at least Neolithic in age.

Place names in Cornwall are largely Celtic, with elements such as tre-, pen-, and lan-. A scattering of names throughout England are of Celtic origin. Names in Wales are mainly of Celtic origin, common elements being llan-, pen-, and cwm-. In southern Scotland, place names are generally Celtic (both Goidelic and Brythonic), Anglo-Saxon, or Scandinavian.

In the Scottish Highlands names are generally Gaelic (such as loch, glen, and inver), with Norse influence around the coasts and islands (including island names ending in -ay).

[edit] Roman names

Chester, -cester, -caster, or other similar elements, indicate a Roman fort or settlement. Medieval Latin added various elements such as Regis (of the King), Magna (great), and Parva (little).

[edit] Anglo-Saxon names

Place names are generally composed of either a single element or a compound of two elements. The Anglo-Saxons contributed many elements such as -ing-, -ham-, -ton, -bury, -stead, -ford, and -ley. These form the majority of place names in England and some in Wales and Scotland.

[edit] Norse and Scandinavian names

Scandinavian place names such as -by, thorpe, and toft are commonest in the area covered by the Danelaw, the north and east of England north of Watling Street. Also in this area, church becomes kirk and ditch becomes dike. In the south and west of England, place names are more Anglo-Saxon.

[edit] Norman French names

Following the Norman conquest, some place names acquired prefixes or suffixes giving their new owners. or example Grays Thurrock or Stoke Mandeville. Other names that are suffixed with the name of a landowning family include Stanton Lacy and Newport Pagnell. Some names reflect a connection with the church, such as Monkwearmouth and Newton Abbot.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • A Dictionary of English Place-Names, A. D. Mills, Oxford, 1991.
  • The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-names, Eilert Ekwall, Oxford, four editions: 1936, 1940, 1947, 1960.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ A H Smith, "The place-names of the North Riding of Yorkshire" by (Cambridge 1928, page 66)
  2. ^ Della Hooke, The Landscape of Anglo-Saxon England (Leicester University Press, Reprinted 2001, page 9)

[edit] External links