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The Interplay of Language in the Yorkshire countryside
How Scandinavian, Anglo Saxon etc language reveals the rural history
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By about 1000 CE, the names of many towns
and places were of Viking origin, such as those ending in by or thorp. However
the old Anglo Saxon names remained abundant suggesting an assimilation during the
Viking times rather than a period of ethnic cleansing. Scandinavian language
survived widely in the countryside.
Names of Towns
Anglo Saxon - Stone
crosses or spelhowes/spel
crosses
Scandinavian – by
or thorp
Examples of Yorkshire towns with Scandinavian
names – Normanby, Roxby, Whitby, Bedale, Boosbeck,
Keldholme, Kirkbymoorside
Examples of Yorkshire towns with Anglo
Saxon names –Brotton, Coatham, Darlington, Leyburn, Egton, Kirkleatham,
Liverton, Middleham, Pickering, Skelton
Names of features
Anglo Saxon – Place
names which end ingaham, ing,
ham, ington, burn, lea, feld, tun were originally Anglo
Saxon homesteads.
Scandinavian -
‘dalr’, meaning ‘dale’; gill
(steep), slack (shallow), wham (small), beck (stream), keld (spring), toft and garth
(enclosures), ness (headland), holme
(meadow), wath (ford), sett (high
pasture), skogr (wood), lund
(grove), gang or gate (roads)
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