Looking Backwards: Nice Place You Have (1)
I’ve loved maps for as long as I can remember. Not only do they feed the imagination for far away and, presumably, exotic places, but they’re also mysteries to be unravelled. It always intrigued me how the maps had been created, how the people had travelled there and why were so many places saddled with such strange and bizarre names. I’m sure that my mother in particular spent many moments wondering why exactly I was chuckling when scanning an Atlas. It was of course the names of towns, rivers, mountains and lakes. Why, oh why, I wondered did they name that town by THAT name. Naturally, as always, such questions lead to many, many interesting places – and not all of them on maps. But what’s my point, you may be wondering about now, and how does it apply to my Ancestry investigations?
As my father was born in Southern Ireland and my mother had
a very Irish maiden name I presumed that my lineage was going to be almost
exclusively Ireland based. As I learnt very early on I was wrong – dead wrong.
On my mother’s side most of her ancestors were from the Midlands and then, much
later, scattered across the country but mostly from the Midlands southwards.
Despite having (apparently) 36% Scottish DNA I have still yet to find any
Scottish ancestors – but I’m working on that. But we should start from the
beginning – at least as far as I’m concerned. My mother, I and both of my
siblings were born in Liverpool (home of The Beatles!) on the North-West coast
of England. This is from Wiki: The name comes from the Old English lifer,
meaning thick or muddy water, and pōl, meaning a pool or creek, and is first
recorded around 1190 as Liuerpul. According to the Cambridge Dictionary of
English Place-Names, "The original reference was to a pool or tidal creek
now filled up into which two streams drained". The place appearing as
Leyrpole, in a legal record of 1418, may also refer to Liverpool. Other origins
of the name have been suggested, including "elverpool", a reference
to the large number of eels in the Mersey.
This is, of course, one of the great things about English place
names – many of them are OLD and some of them are so old that no one actually
knows where the name comes from. In this case ‘Old English’ means Anglo-Saxon
but there are places with modernised versions of Roman names, Celtic names, Scandinavian
names and so on and, of course, place names have an influence on family names
with a typical ‘X of Y’ Surname not exactly uncommon. [Side Note: It’s always
funny finding someone in my lineage called ‘Fletcher’ or ‘Bowman’ or some such
and ponder “I wonder what THEIR ancestors did for a living!”].
Going back a few more generations a LOT of my ancestors came
from in and around Wolverhampton. From Wiki: The city is named after Wulfrun, who founded
the town in 985, from the Anglo-Saxon Wulfrūnehēantūn ("Wulfrūn's high or
principal enclosure or farm"). Before the Norman Conquest, the area's name
appears only as variants of Heantune or Hamtun, the prefix Wulfrun or similar
appearing in 1070 and thereafter. Alternatively, the city may have earned its
original name from Wulfereēantūn ("Wulfhere's high or principal enclosure
or farm") after the Mercian King, who according to tradition established
an abbey in 659, though no evidence of an abbey has been found. The variation
Wolveren Hampton is seen in medieval records, e.g. in 1381. So, solidly
Anglo-Saxon again. I had no idea that Wolverhampton’s history went back quite
that far.
Interestingly, digging a little deeper, a whole bunch of my
maternal ancestors hail from a place called Sheriffhales in Shropshire. From
Wiki: The name derives from Halh (Anglican) and scīr-rēfa (Old English) which
is a combination of Hales (a nook of land, small valley) and Sheriff (a king's
executive). At the time of the Domesday Book, it was held by Roger de Balliol
the Sheriff of Shropshire. I did have a feeling it was a Norman sounding name
but it looks like the village, which only had around 1000 people scattered
across farmland when my 4th great-grandfather lived there, pre-dated
the Norman invasion.
Another interesting, and somewhat weird, place name is Gnosall
in Staffordshire. My 4th great-grandmother was born there at the
turn of the 19th century. From Wiki: The village was mentioned in
the Domesday Book, in which it was named Geneshale. It is listed there as
having a population of 12 households. According to research presented online by
the University of Nottingham, the name Gnosall derives from a combination of
the Old Welsh Genou meaning 'mouth' and the Mercian word halh meaning 'a nook
of land' or 'a small valley' or 'dry ground in marsh.' The Gnosall Parish
Council also believes that Gnosall derives from both Genou and halh, however
believes that halh actually stands for 'low-lying land by a river' and states
that Gnosall translates to a ‘narrow valley that suddenly opens out into a
wider one’. That same site also states that there are at least 27 different
spellings of the name, the oldest surviving record being for Geneshale in the
Domesday Book of 1086, and that it is only by chance that Gnosall is the
current spelling. How STRANGE is that one – a name so ‘odd’ that no one could
agree on its spelling!
My 5th great-grandmother was also born in
Shropshire in a little place called Shifnal. From Wiki: The town, also once
known as "Idsall" (relating to potential Roman links), most probably
began as an Anglian settlement, established by the end of the 7th century. Shifnal
is thought to be the place named "Scuffanhalch" in a 9th-century
charter, as a possession of the monastery at Medeshamstede (later Peterborough
Abbey). Though this seems a dubious claim, and the ancient charter is in fact a
12th-century forgery, the full picture is more complex. Sir Frank Stenton
considered that "Scuffanhalch", along with "Costesford"
(Cosford) and "Stretford", formed part of a list of places which had
once been connected with Medeshamstede; and the charter purports to have been issued
by King Æthelred of Mercia, during much of whose reign the bishop of Mercia was
Sexwulf (or "Saxwulf"), founder and first abbot of Medeshamstede. The
first part of the name "Shifnal" is reckoned to be a personal name,
"Scuffa", while the second part, from "halh", means a
valley, thus describing the town's topography. Unusually, the name of the town
has alternated through the centuries between Idsall and Shifnal. Idsall is
mentioned in a 9th-century charter as "Iddeshale", meaning
"Idi's nook" or corner. A nook is said to be an area of land of
approximately 20 acres (81,000 m2). It is often conjectured that the two names
of Idsall and Shifnal were names of settlements on the east and west sides
respectively of Wesley Brook, a brook which runs through the town, and is a
tributary of the River Worfe. In the 19th century, J. C. Anderson, in his
Shropshire its Early History and Antiquities, wrote that Idsall means
"Hall of Ide", and that Shifnal is "Hall of Sceafa".
You see why I like looking at maps so much. Place names are
not only important and endlessly fascinating but tell you a LOT about the
history of that particular place as well as what was going on in the rest of
the country. The things you can learn from an apparently simply enquiry into
your ancestry continues to blow me away. MUCH more to follow…
4 comments:
curiously intriguing!
Place names are often weird and cry out for digging into their backgrounds. When I worked in London I lived near a place called 'Badgers Mount'. It always brought a smile to my lips as I went by on the bus..... [grin]
This is fantastic! I love maps and place names as well, and there are some great books on the subject. I am particularly fond of places bearing Anglo-Saxon names, no surprise there!
@ Sarah: There are some VERY strange place names out there - even some I couldn't believe until I looked them up. More to come. BTW - did you check out the previous 'Looking Backwards' post about people names. Some REALLY odd ones in there too - and some completely brilliant ones!!
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