Day
Forty Six
What’s
in a name?
When we lived in Cornwall, my son and I went to a folk
festival in a delightful place called Skinner’s Bottom, which so amused my
little boy that we didn’t worry about the torrential rain which swamped our
tent.
Having such an ancient history and suffering many invasions, Great Britain has many unusual place names: Norse, Anglo Saxon and Roman.
Pratt’s
Bottom
also amuses more than school children and there
are many ‘Bottoms’ in the UK, it simply means a valley or deep hollow.
Scratchy
Bottom
in Dorset was featured in the film, ‘Far From the Madding Crowd’ and is not far
from the hamlet of Shitterton voted ‘Britain’s worst place name’ in 2012.
Residents however, are proud of their
1,000 year history; the name accurately describes a place which was set aside
to function as a community lavatory.
What a pity it’s a long way from Peover Superior in Cheshire.
In 2012, as a result of multiple
thefts of the Shittington sign, a group of residents chipped in to buy a 1.5 ton block of local Purbeck Stone to replace them.
Try pinching that! |
I wonder if he snored? Snear the Snorer.
It stands by the River
Stiffkey, pronounced ‘Stewkey’. In fact the area has been famous for
its cockles, an edible saltwater clam, called ‘Stewkey Blues.’
Barton in the Beans, Leicestershire, was part of the
lands given to Hugh de Grandmesne by William the Conqueror.
The
village, also known as Barton-in-Fabris
was famous for growing Broad Beans vicia faba. Over time, Barton in Fabris became Barton Beans.
Curry Mallet is in Somerset and in 1086, owned
by Roger de Courselles and later,, in 1215 by Willliam Malet one of the Barons who hammered King John into signing the Magna
Carta.
The
Manor House is the site of supernatural apparitions:
a woman in Elizabethan dress and a man who marches up and down. Several people have also heard sword fights,
metal against metal.
Possibly this only
happens when they’ve eaten a particularly hot Vindaloo?
Or
maybe they’ve just arrived in Curry
Mallet from Nether Wallop, the ancient village used in the Miss Marple
films.
Nether Wallop, named Britains Prettiest Village. |
Marsh Gibbon, Bishop's Itchington and Queen Camel.
A possibly Bronze Age megalith on Blubberhouse Moor |
Blubberhouses on the Yorkshire moors has nothing to do with whales.
This unpreposessing name has prettier, Anglo-Saxon origins,
meaning, 'a house by a bubbling stream.'
Not too
far away you’ll find Wetwang and Wetwang Slack, Norse names
said to indicate a wet or marshy field. As they’re near a dry field on higher ground,
now called Driffield, it may well be true.
Heaton Royds Farm at Six Days Only |
When I was a girl, I often walked to Six Days Only a small hamlet on Shay Lane in Heaton.
Here, I
and any other walker taking this popular route, could knock on the door of a small cottage and
ask for non-alcoholic Nettle Beer. It
cost 6d (sixpence) at the time and was
absolutely delicious.
Adjacent to the cottages was a large market garden, the Head
Gardener being a Mr Gudgeon, who told me
the strange name came from Victorian times.
The cottagers used to sell Nettle and Ginger
Beer plus produce from the gardens.
However, Sunday was by far the
busiest time for passing trade, as most people loved to take this walk after
Sunday dinner.
Young men would often stop
and ask for posies for their sweethearts.
The demand for refreshments,
especially in Summer, became too much. So the farm owner put up a sign, “Six
Days Only” and the name stuck.
Another
place familiar to my family is the Cornish hamlet of Indian Queens, not too far
from Summercourt, whose annual Fair is, at 800 years, the oldest in Britain.
Indian Queens, in Cornish Myghternes Eyndek, had at one time a coaching inn of the same name, on a plot called White Splat (yes, seagulls come to mind, it’s only 7km from the sea at Newquay).
It is said the name was given as a result of the legend which states Pocahontas, princess of the Powhatan nation, she who saved John Smith from death, stayed in the area.
Pocahontas - Rebecca |
But wait…. There’s another legend:
A Portuguese princess landed at Falmouth and stayed the night at the inn.
Local people, unfamiliar with the Portugese but aware Indian traders had darker skin, assumed she was from Calcutta.
Place names tell the history of a country and each one has its idiosycrasies; it's fascinating to know and imagine how they all came about.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thanks for reading my blog.