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+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #63263 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/63263)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Place Names in Kent, by John Horsley
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Place Names in Kent
-
-Author: John Horsley
-
-Release Date: September 22, 2020 [EBook #63263]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PLACE NAMES IN KENT ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Brian Coe, Stephen Hutcheson, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- PLACE NAMES
- IN KENT.
-
-
- BY
- CANON J. W. HORSLEY,
- _Late Vicar of Detling_.
-
-
- Price 3/6 Net.
-
- MAIDSTONE:
- “South Eastern Gazette” Newspaper Co., Ltd.,
- 4, High Street.
- 1921.
-
-
-
-
- INDEX
-
-
- Page.
- Place-names of Celtic Origin 9
- Roman Names in Kent 17
- Teutonic (Jutish) Names in Kent 20
- Saxon or Jutish Suffixes 26
- Some Common Saxon Elements in Place-names 29
- The Northmen in Kent 42
- The Islands of Kent 46
- Variations in the Spelling of Place-names 49
- Ecclesiastical Place-names 52
- Place-names from Persons 54
- Absurdities in Derivation 57
- Our “Tons” and “Stones” 60
- Our “Hams” 63
- Our “Soles,” “Burys” and “Hithes” 68
- Our “Cold Harbours” 71
- Anderida 74
- Land Divisions of Kent 78
-
-
-
-
- INTRODUCTION.
-
-
-When I was a school boy at Canterbury, in the fifties and sixties, my
-first interest in philology was evoked by Trench on _The Study of
-Words_, and by the more elaborate pioneer work, Isaac Taylor’s _Words
-and Places_, while oral instruction was afforded by the lectures of Dean
-Alford and the class teaching of my Headmaster, Mitchinson. All four of
-these leaders having been clergymen, it is perhaps fitting that, at a
-considerable distance, both of time and of ability, another cleric
-should attempt to localize some of their general teaching.
-
-Becoming aware in 1920 that there was no book dealing with the _Place
-Names of Kent_, such as has been produced by individuals or small
-committees in the case of some other counties, twenty in number; finding
-also by correspondence that McClure, the author of _British Place Names
-in Their Historical Setting_, says “Kent is one of the most difficult
-regions in England to trace its topographical history,” I set to work to
-read all I could that bore upon the subject. Especially when laid up by
-an ailment, I read through twenty-six volumes of _Archælogia Cantiana_,
-and found therein a productive quarry. Then, to facilitate the future
-labours of those more competent to deal fully with the subject, I wrote
-a series of weekly articles in the _South Eastern Gazette_ last winter,
-which were found of interest, Mr. E. Salter Davies asking me to write
-something for the _Kent Education Gazette_ to enlist the co-operation of
-school teachers, and to remind them of the educational benefit to their
-pupils of a study of local names.
-
-In some parts of England and Wales this study of local place names has
-been taken up with enthusiasm by teachers and scholars, and in this
-connexion it should be noted that the names of every lane, house, and
-field and wood, should be ascertained and recorded, even if no meaning
-can be found. Names of this kind change, and the old folk who could say
-why a name was given will not be always with us. “Terriers” and Tithe
-Maps, which can be consulted, if not borrowed, will give more names than
-ordinary maps.
-
-To such enquiries we may be stimulated by shame when we know that Kent
-is one of the counties without a work on its place names, and even more
-by the fact that Norway has been at work in this direction since
-1896—the Church and the State collaborating and a State grant helping in
-the production of the nineteen volumes already published. So too, in
-Sweden, a committee was appointed by Royal authority in 1901, and one
-province has already been dealt with exhaustively. Denmark also from
-1910, under the Ministry of Education, and with State grants, thus
-recognised the linguistic and historico-archæological importance of such
-studies.
-
-And yet none of these enlightened and progressive kingdoms have anything
-like the advantage that England possesses in its Saxon Charters and its
-Domesday Book. More honour to them, more shame to us!
-
-Let it be clearly understood, however, from the first that I am not
-writing as an expert on these matters, nor as having a direct knowledge
-of Celtic or of Saxon. All I have attempted has been simply to collect,
-for the benefit of those who shall be attracted to the study of our
-place-names as elucidating the ancient history of the County,
-information from many sources which will save them the time and labour
-of finding out for themselves whether a particular name is old enough to
-be found in Domesday Book, or in later Saxon charters and wills; and
-especially there has been in my mind the hope that a committee may be
-appointed to deal as well with Kent as other Counties have been,
-especially by the great Anglo-Saxon scholars, Professor Skeats,
-Professor Craigie, of Oxford, and Professor Mawer, of Newcastle. For
-such literary artizans and architects as I hope may shortly arise, I am
-more than content to have been but a day labourer, a collector of
-material which others may find worthy of scrutiny and perhaps of use.
-
- [Illustration: decorative glyph]
-
-
-
-
- PLACE NAMES IN KENT.
-
-
-
-
- Place Names of Celtic Origin.
-
-
-Men of Kent must not make too much of their county motto, _Invicta_. As
-a matter of fact, we have been conquered at various times, and sometimes
-before the rest of England succumbed to the invader. The aborigines, who
-were probably somewhat like the Esquimeaux, a small race, having only
-stone weapons and tools, lived on the fringe of the great glacier of the
-last Ice Age (perhaps 50,000 years ago), which enabled one (though
-doubtless no one tried) to walk from what is now Middlesex and Kent to
-the North Pole; even the present North Sea being part of the great sheet
-of ice which covered all our land down to the north bank of the Thames.
-When climatic conditions altered for the better, England (to call it by
-its much later name) became desirable to the great west-ward migration
-of the Celts, who had already over-run all North Europe. This was the
-first of the five great waves of peoples who from the East seized on
-Europe, each driving its predecessor westward. The Celtic is, at any
-rate, the first to be clearly traced. It was divisible into the Gadhelic
-and the Cymric (or Brythonic) element, from the former the Erse, Gaelic,
-and Manx languages being derived, and from the latter the Welsh and the
-Breton (Ancient British and Gaulish, the Cornish, and probably the
-Pictish).
-
-The first branch is said to have passed into Britain about 800 B.C., and
-the second about 630 B.C. Thenceforward, but for a few place-names,
-chiefly of rivers and heights, and still fewer words which have survived
-in our tongue, we know little until the visit of Julius Cæsar in B.C.
-54, from whose _Gallic War_ we learn of some of the Celtic tribe-names
-and place-names. Otherwise we know little apart from the river roots
-which we find all over N. Europe (and hardly any in England are
-non-Celtic), especially the five main words for river or
-water—Afon—Dur—Esk—Rhe—and Don.
-
-Kent itself in the earliest records is found as Ceant from the Celtic
-Cenn—a head or headland, which again appears on the other side of our
-land as the Mull of Cantire. We have also our Chevening, which, like
-Chevenage, embodies the Celtic Cefn—ridge (still Cefn in Welsh). And
-“Kits Coty House” on our neighbouring Down gives us Ked—a hollow, and
-Coit—a wood, i.e., the hollow dolmen in the wood. Mote Park sounds
-modern enough to some; but our “park” is the Celtic parwyg, an enclosed
-place, while the much later Anglo-Saxon Mote denotes a place of local
-assembly. Dun was their word for a hill-fort, and so we have Croydon
-(with a Saxon prefix) for the fortress on the chalk range, though most
-of the old British fortresses which preserved the name when occupied by
-Romans or Saxons are in other counties. Penshurst, on the other hand,
-has a Saxon suffix to the Celtic Pen, still unchanged in Welsh as
-meaning a head or hill, perhaps only a dialectic form of the Gaelic
-Ceann, or Ken, which we have already noted in “Kent.”
-
-As to whether the names of Romney and Romney Marsh have a Celtic
-element, opinions differ. Isaac Taylor, in his _Words and Places_, has
-little doubt that they come “from the Gaelic ruimne,” a marsh, and
-instances Ramsey, in the Fens, as coming from the same source, and finds
-it also in Ramsgate, i.e., the passage through an opening in the cliffs
-to the marshes behind. But he wrote in 1864, and in some respects is
-considered too imaginative by modern philologists. Ruim is undoubtedly
-the British name of Thanet—Ruoihm, or Ruoichim—preceding Tenit,
-Tenitland, Thanet—so perhaps the situation of Ramsgate in Thanet is all
-we have to consider. McClure ignores “ruimne” as a derivation; but does
-not explain the Rumin as a name of the district. The oldest English form
-is in a charter of 697 A.D. Rumining—seta, i.e., the dwellings of the
-people of Rumin, and he inclines (though admitting it may be
-far-fetched) to derive from “Roman,” since the whole region is full of
-Roman associations. Our common suffix “den,” for a deep wooded valley,
-gives us probably a Celtic word adopted by the conquering Jutes. Perhaps
-the explanation for so few Celtic names of places having survived is
-accounted for by the thoroughness with which the invading Jutes either
-slew or drove far westwards the Celts, and so re-named whatever
-settlements they made. Thus, in 452 A.D., according to the _Saxon
-Chronicle_, Hengist slew 4,000 Britons at Crayford, and these must have
-formed a large proportion of the population, and this was only one of a
-series of victories which drove the Celts backward into the far west.
-Purely Celtic Kent was prehistoric; Romano-Celtic it was from B.C. 55 to
-A.D. 413, and yet marvellously little remains of either element.
-
-This mighty race has left us little record, though its language survives
-in Scotland, Ireland, and Wales. In Maidstone Museum we can study its
-weapons, its ornaments, and its methods of sepulture; but in our walks
-in Kent we are rarely reminded of its long, as well as ancient,
-occupation of the soil. Yet in what we might consider the purest English
-some undoubtedly Celtic words survive, such as basket, crook, kiln,
-fleam, barrow, ashlar, rasher, mattock, bran, gown, flannel.
-
-Availing myself of what has been written by Celtic or Saxon scholars, I
-turn to the river names of Kent, of which some are obviously Celtic and
-others as obviously Saxon.
-
-
-Ash.—The western branch of the Stour is so named, and Ashford was
-anciently Esshetsford. Rivers have sometimes been named from the trees
-on their banks, and besides our Ash-ford, we find elsewhere Ashbrook and
-Ashbourne; though the common Celtic esk for water or river may also be
-considered. In this connection I note that in a direct line we have near
-Detling, Boxley, Thornham, Hollingbourne (Anglo-Saxon Holeyn is holly),
-possibly Bearsted from the Saxon Berc for birch, and Ashford from Aesc,
-our ash.
-
-
-Brook.—This later, or English, name for a small stream appears only as a
-termination. We have Cranbrook, a reminder, like Cranbourne elsewhere,
-of the time when cranes were not uncommon in England. These are the
-places: Brook, a village on a tributary of the Stour; Brookland, near a
-branch of the Rother; and Brook Street, near Woodchurch. And may not
-Kidbrooke, or Kedbrook, be “the brook from the Coed”—the Celtic word for
-a wood?
-
-
-Bourne.—The Anglo-Saxon Burne for stream appears not only in the Bourne
-and Bourne Park, and the various Nail-bournes, or intermittently flowing
-brooks, but also in Bekesbourne, Bishopsbourne, Patrixbourne,
-Littlebourne, the Ravensbourne, Hollingbourne, Brabourne (the broad
-bourne), Northbourne, and perhaps Sittingbourne, although this is on a
-creek rather than a brook.
-
-
-Cray.—From the Saxon Cregga, a small brook, a tributary of the Darent or
-Derwent. In 457 A.D. Hengist and his son Æsc (Ash, or, metaphorically,
-ship) slew 4,000 Britons at Crecganford, and drove the rest out of Kent
-to Lundenbyrg (London). So the _Saxon Chronicle_ records. Another old
-chronicler calls this the battle of the Derwent. The valley of the Cray
-contains the villages of Crayford, St. Paul’s (probably S. Paulinus’)
-Cray, St. Mary’s Cray, Foot’s Cray, and the district is commonly called
-the Crays.
-
-
-Darent.—Like Dover’s Dour, from the Celtic root Dur for water or river,
-comes the Der-went, of which Darent is a variation. Dwr-gwyn in Welsh is
-the clear water. There are four Derwents in England, besides Lake
-Derwent Water. Dartford is the ford of the Darent.
-
-
-Dour.—The living Celtic tongues of Wales, Ireland and Scotland preserve
-the Celtic Dur—Dwr in Welsh, Dur in Gælic and Erse. There are other
-Dours in Fife and Aberdeen, and the Dover or Dur-beck in Notts, and in
-Sussex the Roman itinerary gives Portum Adurni, whence it has been
-assumed that there was an Adour river. But Prichard gives forty-four
-ancient names containing this root in Italy, Germany, Gaul, and Britain.
-
-
-Eden.—The Eden, on which is Edenbridge, is a tributary of the Medway.
-Various rivers of this name are found also in Cumberland, Yorks, Fife
-and Roxburgh, containing the Celtic root Dan, Don, or Den, for water or
-river.
-
-
-Lee.—This is a brook rising at Eltham Place, and giving its name to Lee
-Street and Lee, thence flowing to Lewisham. The more important river Lea
-on the opposite side of the Thames is called Lygan in the _Saxon
-Chronicle_. In Essex also there is the Lea-beck, which shows a Celtic
-name with a suffix attributable to the Danish marauders whose becks are
-more common in the north of England. The dropping of the last syllable
-of Lygan would give the Lee.
-
-
-Len.—This short tributary of the Medway has been neglected by writers on
-place-names; but it might be the Celtic Levn, smooth, as in Loch Leven
-and three rivers of that name in Scotland, besides others in
-Gloucestershire, Yorks, Cornwall, Cumberland, and Lancashire.
-
-
-Medway.—The first syllable is adjectival, like the Tam (broad or still)
-in Tamesa or Thames, and is the Celtic Mwg, vapour, whence our “muggy.”
-The second is from a varying Celtic root, represented in Welsh by gwy or
-wy, for water. Most of the river-names from this root are in Wales; but
-besides the Medway there is the Solway, on the Scottish border, and such
-names as Weymouth and Weybridge. In the _Saxon Chronicle_ it is spelled
-Medewægan. Worth recording (if only to discard them) are some
-derivations given in Ferguson’s _River Names_. Writing in 1862 (since
-when some study has been more scientific), he gives the suggestion of
-the German, Grimm, that the name refers to a cup of mead overturned by a
-river god! Also that Gibson’s _Etymological Geography_ derives it from
-the Latin medius because the river flows through the middle of Kent! and
-this, says Gibson, is the usual acceptation. Ferguson throughout has
-Sanscrit on the brain, and so refers us to a Sanscrit root, mid, to
-soften, and thinks it named from its gentle flow. But which of our
-Kentish rivers are not gentle?
-
-
-Quaggy.—One of the two brooks at Lewisham. Quag may be the same as Quag
-in quagmire, and the second syllable the Anglo-Saxon “ea” for water or
-river, cognate with the old High German “aha” and the Latin “aqua.” In
-Rosetti’s poem we find “I fouled my feet in quag-water.”
-
-
-Ravensbourne.—When Teutonic colonists or invaders, dispossessing the
-Celts, inquired the name of a stream, they took the Celtic word to be a
-proper instead of a common name, and so added their own name for water
-or river. Later, when the English tongue was evolved, “water” was
-sometimes added to the Celtic, or Celtic-plus-Saxon, name. Thus, in
-Wansbeck-water, Wan is Alfon and Evon; S is a vestige of the Gadhelic
-visge; Beck is the Norse addition; and Water the later English when it
-was forgotten what Wansbeck meant. Thus our present name means
-River-water-river-water! So Ravensbourne (interpreted inanely in a
-Lewisham print by a legend of a raven and a bone) is really the Celtic
-Avon, with the Saxon addition of Bourne, so common in Kent for stream.
-
-
-Rother.—A mainly Sussex stream which forms part of the boundary of Kent.
-It is said to be the Celtic Rhud-dwr—that is Red Water.
-
-
-Stour.—There are other rivers of this name in Suffolk, Dorset,
-Warwickshire, and Worcestershire, besides the Stör in Holstein, the
-Stura, a tributary of the Po, and the Stura (now the Store) in Italy,
-all probably named from the union of two Celtic words for water, Is and
-Dwr. Some regard it as merely the intensitive of Dwr, as in Welsh the
-prefix Ys is used to intensify. Note that a unique river name is a
-rarity.
-
-
-Swale.—Bede, the Saxon historian, writes of the baptisms by S. Paulinus,
-in the Sualua. This is the Swale, which makes Sheppey an island. There
-are the East and the West Swale and Swalecliff, and the origin may be
-from the Anglo-Saxon Swellan, to swell. There are other Swales in
-Britain and Germany.
-
-
-Thames.—This means the Broad, or Still, Water, from the Celtic adjective
-Tam and the root Is for water, which is reduplicated in the name Isis
-for the river at Oxford, higher than where the Thames falls into it.
-There is a river Tame in four of our counties.
-
-
-Wantsum.—This much-dwindled stream separates Thanet from the mainland,
-and is called Wantsumu by Bede. The word is said to be not Celtic (as
-are most river names here and on the Continent); but Teutonic. Want or
-Went, meant a Way, and Som had the same qualifying force as in the word
-“winsome,” that is, equivalent to the “able” in “lovable.” There is a
-Wensum, a tributary of the Yare, near Norwich. While in early days the
-north branch of the Stour by Thanet was not fordable, this water was
-“go-able”—to coin a word. The “way” is not necessarily a water way. At
-Ightham, Seven Vents is the name of a place where seven roads meet.
-
-
-Yenlade or Yenlet.—“Applied by Lewis to the north and south mouths of
-the estuary of the Wantsum, which made Thanet an island. The A.S.
-gen-lad means a discharging of a river into the sea, or a smaller river
-into one larger.” Ladan or hladan means to load or lade. Lambarde wrote
-in 1570 “Yenlade or yenlet betokeneth an Indraught or Inlett of water
-into the land.” There are two or three places of this name in the mouth
-of the Thames. Yantlet Creek is in the Isle of Grain.
-
-
-Beult.—The final t is not found in the earliest records I have seen,
-where the name is Beule. One of our best Kent archæologists suggests the
-Saxon verb Beauland, to turn or twist, as the origin. I think, however,
-we may go further back and find no exception to the rule that most of
-our rivers were named by the Celts, for I find the Erse or Irish Buol or
-Biol for water, and in addition to Continental rivers which contain this
-root there is the Buil (now called the Boyle) in Ireland, the Beela in
-Westmorland, and the Beauly in Inverness.
-
-
-
-
- Roman Names in Kent.
-
-
-The first appearance of Kent in history is in the Gallic War of Julius
-Cæsar, who paid us the compliment of saying, _Ex his omnibus, longe sunt
-humanissimi qui Cantium incolunt_, on which Shakespeare wrote, “Kent in
-commentaries Cæsar writ, Is termed the civil’st place in all the isle.”
-Of his presence here, however, the only relic is perhaps more in the
-realm of legend than of history. There is a mound or barrow at Chilham
-known as Julaber’s or Juliberry’s grave, which has been referred to
-Julius Laberius, an officer of Julius Cæsar, slain in a battle here
-against the British Celts. Julius Cæsar left our shores 54 B.C., and our
-history is a blank until A.D. 43 (roughly for a hundred years) when the
-Emperor Claudius came to conquer us, in which campaign Titus took a
-part, who in A.D. 70 captured Jerusalem—as later some Detling young men
-entered Jerusalem under General Allenby! Kent and the Thames tribes were
-first conquered, and in the occupation of Britain from A.D. 43 to A.D.
-418 it was the rest of the country which gave military work to the
-Romans.
-
-Considering this long occupation, ended only by the necessary recall of
-the troops to defend falling Rome, it is surprising that so few
-place-names, not only in Kent but anywhere, are attributable to our
-masters. Those usually instanced are Speen (anciently Spinæ, thorns);
-Pontefract (the broken bridge); Chester (Castra, a camp), with its later
-derivations, the Anglian Caster and the Saxon Chester; and Caerleon
-(Castra Legionum—the camp of the Legions); and of these not one is in
-Kent. The chief centres of the sparse population, and the natural
-landmarks of rivers and mountains, preserved the names given earlier by
-the Celts, while our villages with few exceptions are Scandinavian or
-Teutonic, otherwise Norse or Saxon. Prof. Green, in his _History of the
-English People_, is doubtless right in saying that “only in the great
-towns were the Britons Romanized. The tribes of the rural districts
-remained apart, speaking their own tongue and owing some traditional
-allegiance to their native chiefs.”
-
-Kent had more than its share of the mighty road-making of Rome; more
-than its share (except in the turbulent northern boundary of England) of
-Roman military stations; but though the roads remain, forts are only
-bits of ruins or foundations, and the names have perished or been
-changed. So, too, in Kent were most of the nine Roman ports put under
-the jurisdiction of the Comes Littoris Saxonici. In the Antonine
-Itinerary of the fourth century the route from the Northern Wall in
-Dumfriesshire to our Richborough has as its last station Londonio
-(London), Noviomago (site unknown), 10 miles; Vigniacis (? Springhead),
-18 miles; Durobrivis (Rochester), 9 miles; Durolevo (? near
-Sittingbourne), 13 miles; Duroverno (Canterbury), 12 miles; and Rutupis
-(Richborough), 12 miles. In no case has the Roman name survived, with
-the exception of the twisted Rutupis, for Lundon-ium is the old name
-adopted by the Romans. Other routes add Dubris (Dover), 14 miles from
-Duroverno, and Portus Limanis (Lympne), 16 miles from Dubris. Where we
-find Street it is, of course, the Saxon form of the Roman Strata Via,
-_i.e._, paved road, and so our Kentish Stone Street ran from the
-fortified port (as it was then, though inland now) of Lympne to
-Canterbury; and Watling Street (the name still surviving in London and
-Canterbury) from their other fortified ports of Rutupiæ (Richborough) to
-Canterbury, London, Stony Stratford, and Chester. But Watling is not
-Latin, and in the _Saxon Chronicle_ the name is Wæclingastræt. So, too,
-the Well Street which ran from Maidstone into the Weald—with no definite
-end—is the road in the Wald, or Weald, forest. We may perhaps add the
-places ending in “hall” as a relic of the Roman aula. These are more
-common in Thanet and Romney Marsh than elsewhere, and in both these
-places Romans had much to do.
-
-The names given to the two Roman fortresses which guarded the Wantsum
-(then an important water way), Regulbium and Rutupiæ, were hard for
-Saxon lips, and so were changed into Raculf-cestre, whence Reculvers,
-and Repta-caester, later Ratesburgh, whence our Richborough. So also the
-Roman name of Rochester—Durobrevis (the stronghold of the bridges)
-became in Saxon times, Roribis, then Hrofibrevi. This was shortened into
-Hrofi, which again was later assumed to be the name of a man, and so
-Bede (twelve hundred years ago) gives us Hrofes-cæster, whence our
-Rochester.
-
-Chislet, however, earlier Cistelet, probably preserves the Roman
-Casteletum, a small castle or camp. And Cheriton (there are others in
-other counties) is said to be derived as to its first two syllables from
-cerasus, cherry, the Romans having introduced this tree about A.D. 60.
-They also brought the plum—prunes—and so we get our Plumstede for
-Plumstead, adjoining Woolwich, and Plumford, in Ospringe.
-
-Also where Wick as a termination is not the Scandinavian Wic or Bay, and
-so a coastal name, it comes from the Latin Vicus, a row of houses, and
-is the Saxonised form. Thus our West Wickham, Wickhambreux, Sheldwich,
-and so forth, record how the Saxons adopted but changed the name given
-by the Romans. McClure suggests that Faversham (Fefres-ham in 811,
-Febresham in 858, and Faversham in Domesday) may be a survival of the
-Latin Faber, smith, in the most Latinized part of Kent, and on their
-chief road. The first part of the word is plainly a genitive case, and
-there seems to be no similar Saxon designation.
-
-On the Continent, as well as in England, the name Ventum, or Venta, is
-the Latin for a market or sale place. Venta Silurum, for example, has
-now as its neighbour Chepstow, _i.e._, Ceapstow, the Market. Having
-lived for eight years as a boy in Wincheap, outside the walls of
-Canterbury, it occurs to me that Win may be Ven from Ventum, while cheap
-gives the Saxon synonym. Its earlier forms are Wencheape, Wyndcheps, and
-Wincheapfield. Of course, it looks like winemarket, but would the Romans
-have had one? And, if so, would it not have been within the walls? On
-the other hand, vineyards—probably first started by the Romans—were not
-uncommon much later in Kent, several near Maidstone, and one’s
-estimation of the pleasantness of wine from outdoor grapes is increased
-by finding in old charters that in some cases tenants were bound to
-bring to an abbot or a lord of the manor “a bushel of blakenberis.” This
-would sweeten and colour the English port!
-
-Few, indeed, are the verbal relics of the Romans, though they were here
-for 400 years. While the earlier Celts have bequeathed to us many words
-and names, but few works, the Romans left us few words but some mighty
-works.
-
-
-
-
- Teutonic (Jutish) Names in Kent.
-
-
-The Romans who had conquered, ruled, and exploited our land for four
-centuries, departed in A.D. 411, owing to the dire necessity of
-defending their own land against the Goths from Northern Europe. Already
-here they had been attacked and pressed southwards by the Picts of the
-Highlands, aided by the Scots of Ireland. To avoid Pictish conquest the
-Britons offered land and pay to the English, who up to then had been
-aiding the Picts.
-
-Who were these English? A long peninsula runs northwards (as few do)
-from Denmark, and separates the North Sea from the Baltic. Herein, our
-real home or cradle, dwelt three tribes of the Low German stock, Angles,
-Jutes, and Saxons, and as to Kent it was the Jutes from Jutland who,
-under Hengist and Horsa, in A.D. 449, landed at Ebbsfleet in Thanet, as
-did others in the Isle of Wight, the Islands in both cases forming a
-great naval and military station, from which the hinterlands of Kent and
-Hants could be overrun. The later, and larger, seizures of the Saxons
-were all the southern counties, Essex, Sussex, Middlesex, and Wessex,
-while the sphere of the Angles spread upwards from what we still call
-East Anglia. Quarrels with these mercenaries arose as to pay, and the
-Britons of Kent resolved to fight. Hrofesceastre was too strong, and so
-southward turned Hengist along the Celtic country by Kits Coty House,
-and then swooped down on Aylesford and won a battle which meant the
-winning of England. Horsa fell in the moment of victory, and the flint
-heap of Horsted preserves his name, and has been held to mark his grave.
-Kentish landowners fled to France; the British labourers to the vast
-forest; churches gave no sanctuary, for the heathen Jutes raged most
-against the clergy.
-
-And so for two centuries the war of dispossession and slaughter went on,
-until Britain was a land, not of Britons, but of Englishmen (Angles, or
-Anglo-Saxons, as they are also called), while even of their language, as
-we have seen, few words lingered. Six years later the shore-castles of
-Dover, Richborough, and Lympne succumbed. Then, in A.D. 447, another
-tribe, the Saxons, came for a share in the goodly spoil, overran
-Anderida, the fortress of the great forest, and “slew all that were
-herein, nor was there afterwards one Briton left,” at any rate, in Kent.
-This Saxon, or strictly speaking, Jutish, invasion has given us most of
-our blood, and the greater part of our tongue, our territorial
-divisions, most names of places, and those of the days of the week.
-
-Following the conquerors came colonists, and in the Saxon districts of
-England (and Kent is the most Saxon of all) we find the names, not of
-individual immigrants, but of families or clans. These family
-settlements are denoted by the termination _ing_, which was the usual
-Anglo-Saxon patronymic, corresponding to our later “son” in Johnson,
-etc. So the sons of Charles Brown, who died in Detling, would in earlier
-days be called the Brownings—as the progeny of a duck are ducklings, and
-of a goose goslings. It has been held that when the suffix ham or ton is
-added it denotes a filial colony or offshoot from the original
-settlement of the clan. There are between two and three thousand places
-in England which contain the root “ing,” although some (mainly in the
-north) come from a Norse and substantive “eng” or “ing” which means
-meadow. Kemble makes 22 original settlements in Kent, and 29 filial
-offshoots, whereas the western or northern counties have no original,
-although, between them, 169 filial settlements.
-
-If we may thus distinguish two classes of place names which survive in
-Kent, we have the Bobbings at Bobbing, the Hôcings at Hucking, the
-Harlings at Harling, the Boerlings at Barling, the Berlings at Birling,
-the Bollings at Bowling, the Garlings at Garlinge, the Hallings at
-Halling, the Hircelings at Hecklinge, the Horings at Herringe, the
-Mollings at Mailing, the Wealings at Welling, the Beltings at Beltring,
-the Cerrings at Charing, the Petlings at Pedling, the Wickings at
-Witchling, the Bermarings at Barming. In one case, however, an
-individual is commemorated in a place-name—Hemmings Bay, near Margate,
-is the scene of the landing of a Danish chieftain in 1009 A. D. There
-were many Saxons in Thanet under Roman rule (as interments have shown),
-but few place names are found there of the patronymic kind, the
-exceptions being Garlinge, Birchington, Halling Court, Osinghelle,
-Ellington, and Newington—of which some are doubtful. What about Detling?
-one of my readers may say. I inclined for some time to the meaning deep
-meadow (as Deptford is the deep fiord or bay), in allusion to its
-position between the vast forest above and the extensive marshes below;
-but Mr. McClure will not hear of “ing” a meadow, in the South of
-England, and one Oxford Professor of Anglo-Saxon writes me as follows:
-“The evidence for ing ‘meadow,’ south of Lincolnshire is so scanty or
-dubious that it would require pretty strong evidence to establish its
-recurrence in Kent place-names.” In that case one must fall back upon a
-Saxon ancestor, and lately in Maidstone were found both Major D’Aeth and
-Mr. De’Ath, whose families would be Deathlings in early Saxon days.
-
-Then, of offshoots, we have in Kent the Ælingtons at Allington, the
-Ellings at Ellington, the Aldings at Aldington, the Eorpings at
-Orpington, the Bennings at Boddington, the Gillings at Gillingham, the
-Cennings at Kennington, the Cosings at Cossington, the Dodings at
-Doddington, the Dœfings at Davington, the Leasings at Lossenham, the
-Pœfings at Pevington, the Syfings at Sevington, the Wickings at
-Wickinghurst, the Lodings at Loddington, the Ellings at Ellington, the
-Bosings at Bossingden (and Bossenden), the Adings at Addington, the
-Œslings at Ashlingham, and possibly the Beecings at Birchington and
-Beckenham. As illustrating the westward migration of the Teutonic race
-we may note, to take one clan, that, starting from Germany, the Hemings
-name Hemingen in Germany, Hemminghausen in Westphalia, Hemingstadt in
-Holstein, Heming in Lorraine and in Alsace, Hemington in
-Northamptonshire and Somerset, and Hemingbrough in Yorks.
-
-It may help some in their enquiry into the origin of place-names if I
-note that of old, and by Saxon lips, the vowel “e” was pronounced like
-our “a.” So, in the case of Berfreystone, Berham, Bernefield, Chert,
-Chertham, Crey, Dertford, Esseherst, Essetlesford, Freningham,
-Herietsham, Herty, Hertleye, Hese, Mergate, Remmesgate, Reyersh,
-Smeredenne, and Werehorne—the vowel sound remaining although the vowel
-was changed when, for example, Hese became our Hayes. And another point
-is that in the Kentish dialect th (a separate character in Saxon) often
-becomes d, _e.g._, gardering for gathering, and dare and dem for there
-and them. This still survives in remote places and aged persons. So
-Beddersden for Bethersden.
-
-I may here add some instances of what in some cases aids, and in other
-cases hinders, a knowledge of the origin and meaning of a
-place-name—that is the very various ways in which the name has been
-spelled. Generally, the earlier the form the better guide to the
-meaning. It will be found that spelling was often so vague that even a
-lawyer in writing an old record or will may spell a name differently in
-the same document, and in most cases in mediæval times the sound of the
-word ruled its spelling. Some examples of multiform names in Kent I give
-here.
-
-
-Edenbridge.—Edeling-bridge, 1225, Ethonbrigge 1457, Edonbregge 1473,
-Edinbregg and Edingbregg 1483, Etonbrigge 1499, Etonbreg 1528,
-Etonbridge 1534, Edulwestbridge 1539, with other forms of which I have
-not noted the dates, Edelmesbrigge, Pons Edelmi. The bridge element is
-clear throughout, but it would also seem that the old name of the river
-Eden was the Edel. Of this there may be evidence which I have not yet
-come across.
-
-
-Bethersden in its earliest form is Beatrichesdenne (1194), which, on the
-analogy of other places, would seem to point to the church being
-dedicated to a local S. Beatrice; but at the same date, and since, its
-patron saint was S. Margaret. Possibly an heiress Beatrice held the
-manor, as Patrixbourne is called, not from the saint of the Church, but
-from one who held the manor, which in Domesday was simply called Bourne.
-Later I find Beterisdenne 1389, Betrycheden 1468, Betresden 1535,
-Beatherisden 1552, and later Beathersden, Beddersden (by Kent dialect
-change of th into d), and Bethersden.
-
-
-Charing is Ciorminege in a Saxon charter of 799 A.D., which proved too
-hard for old English or middle English mouths, so that one finds many
-later variants, such as Cheerynge 1396, Carings, Cerringes (and
-Cherinche in Domesday Book 1036), Cherrving (temp. Edw. 3rd), and at
-last Charing in 1505.
-
-
-Cuxton, probably derived from a personal name, like Cuckfield in Sussex,
-is Codestane in Domesday, Coklestone 1472, Cokston 1503, Cokynston 1533,
-Coxston 1538, Cokestone 1559, and Codstan, Coklestane, Colestane,
-Cukelstane, and Cookstone in other documents.
-
-
-Goodneston, near Ash and Wingham, is no doubt Goodwin’s Town, and once
-had the name of “Godstanstone-les-Elmes, alias Nelmes, near Wingham.” In
-1208 it was Gutsieston, but in 1512 had settled down into Godenston,
-previous variations having been Goldstaneston, Gounceston, Groceston,
-Gusseton, and Guston.
-
-
-
-
- Saxon or Jutish Suffixes.
-
-
-In the earliest days of which we have knowledge all Kent was practically
-either forest or marsh, with a little cornland in Thanet and sheep
-pastures in Sheppey, and it was plainly on the edges of the forests
-(Blean and Anderida running right across the county from Whitstable to
-Cranbrook) that the early settlers from Jutland made their homes. Like
-pioneer backwoodsmen in Canada and elsewhere, they had first to clear of
-trees, and then to fence, the spot each family had chosen. For 25 years
-I have passed annually through the agricultural districts of Belgium,
-Alsace, Lorraine, and Switzerland (and sometimes France), and two things
-always strike me—that English agriculturists are not on the whole so
-thrifty, so tidy, or so hardworking, as their Continental brethren, and
-that abroad they seem to have neither need nor desire for hedges or
-other fences. Our colonists in England, however, show in place-names how
-necessary they thought enclosures to be.
-
-First there is the ubiquitous “_ton_” as a suffix. The sons of Ælla, the
-Ellings, made their Ellington. Now “ton” means an enclosure, and
-especially enclosed land with a dwelling thereon. Then it comes to
-signify the house on the enclosure. In Scotland even now the “toun” is
-the farmhouse and outbuildings, and in Kent I find in a charter of 1432
-a conveyance of “land with all Houses ... called Wattyshagh, formerly
-called Taune.” Then, as the original house became a nucleus, and a
-hamlet swelled into a village, and a village into a town, we got our
-modern sense of the word, which, however, is later than the Norman
-conquest.
-
-Even earlier than “ton” would be “_field_,” which is not the same as lea
-or mead, but denotes a patch of felled or cleared land. So we have our
-Chelsfield, Oakfield, Ifield, Broomfield, Whitfield, Swingfield,
-Fairfield, Hothfield, Stalisfield, Clexfield, Longfield, Fieldgreen, and
-Netherfield, in the more forestal part of Kent, while in the list of
-parishes in the Rochester diocese, where marsh and down prevailed, I
-find only one parish—Matfield—which suggests old felling of trees.
-Sometimes, however, there would be attractive glades or _leys_ on the
-outskirts of the forest, already pastured or cultivated to a certain
-extent. Hence arose not only place-names, but nick-names (sur-names came
-much later) of persons who lived or worked therein, such as John of the
-Horse Ley, John of the Cow Ley, John of the Sheep Ley, John of the Swine
-Ley, which later became surnames. Isaac Taylor enumerates 22 leys in
-Central Kent, but one cannot test his figures without knowing what map
-he used. Hence as place-names our Hartley, Swanley, Langley, Bromley,
-Oakley or Ockley, Hockley, Bickley, Whitley, Boxley, Mydley, Barley,
-Brenchley, Elmley, Ripley, Angley, Beverley, Gorseley Wood, Harley,
-Pluckley, Throwley, Bexley, Leybourne, Shirley, Kelmsley, Ridley,
-Tudeley, etc.
-
-Then there were, and are, the _Dens_, forty-two of them in Central Kent,
-says Isaac Taylor; but Mr. Furley, in his _Weald of Kent_, says that the
-great manor of Aldington alone possessed forty-four dens. It was
-probably a Celtic word adopted by the Saxons, and designated a wooded
-valley mostly used for swine pasture. So we have the Ardenne forest in
-France and Belgium, and elsewhere in England Henley in Arden and the
-Forest of Arden, which stretched from Gloucestershire to Nottingham.
-Down to the 17th century the “Court of the Dens” was held at Aldington,
-near Hythe, to determine pasture rights and wrongs.
-
-One cannot enumerate all the Kentish dens which might be found not only
-on the map but in old manorial records. In old Tenterden alone there
-were Pittesden, Igglesden, Strenchden, Godden, Gatesden, Bugglesden,
-Finchden, Twisden, Lovedene, Haffendene, Brissendene, Haldene, and
-Little Haldene as manors, of some of which even the names have departed.
-I find that of the 16 parishes in the rural deanery of West Charing
-eight end in den and five in hurst, and I think Furley is in error when
-he says that only 16 extant parishes (as distinct from manors) in Kent
-end in den. A small original settlement in a den might soon increase in
-size even in early Saxon times, and so we have several parishes and
-manors called Denton. Other local place-names which are due to their
-position in the old forest land are those which end in _hyrst_ or,
-later, hurst. Hursts and Cherts were the denser parts of the forest, and
-the word is said to apply specially to wooded high ground. The two words
-may be originally the same, with the old German Hart (whence the Hartz
-mountains), as parent. So we have Bredhurst, Goudhurst, Hawkhurst, Hurst
-Wood near Peckham, Penshurst, Sandhurst, Staplehurst, Chart, and two or
-three score more.
-
-Another forest name is _Holt_ or Hot—more common in Surrey than in Kent.
-The German is Holtz, which means both a wood and wood the material. It
-is also a common prefix or suffix in Iceland. Isaac Taylor gives us only
-one Holt in his table, for Central Kent at any rate, but we know
-Knockholt beeches, Birchholt near Smeeth, an Acholt (Oakwood) in each of
-the manors of Dartford, Wingham, and Monkton, and Hot Wood; while
-further study is necessary to determine whether from Holt or from Hoath
-or Hoth (a heath) come Hothfield, Oxenhoath, and Hoath or Hoad near
-Reculver. “Another common suffix in the neighbourhood of ancient
-forests,” says Isaac Taylor, “is Hatch—a hitch-gate, Hêche in French.”
-He gives no example from Kent, but we know our Chartham Hatch, Ivy
-Hatch, and Mersham Hatch and Snoll Hatch. _Wold_ or Weald, a wood, is
-not so common as one would expect, but we have Sibertswold and
-Wymynswold, and Waltham and Waldershare. _Snœd_ is a Saxon word for a
-piece of wood in 8th century charters, and this survives in Hamersnoth
-near Romney, Nod Wall near Lydd, Frisnoth near Appledore, Sibersnode in
-the Hundred of Ham, Snode Hill, Snodehurst, Snodland, and Snodebeam, a
-manor in Yalding.
-
-
-
-
- Some Common Saxon Elements in Place-Names.
-
-
-—HAM = Ham means homestead, but—hamm an enclosure or bend in a river,
-the former being the more common. It is only by early Saxon documents
-that we can tell which word is meant. Alkham for the first, perhaps the
-Hundred of Ham for the latter.
-
-
-—ING, in the middle or end of a name means “sons of.” A final ling is
-also a patronymic when the name ends in ol or ele. Thus Donnington is
-the settlement of the sons of Donna, and as Didling or Dudelyng in
-Sussex (with 13th century forms of Dedling and Dedlinge) was derived
-from Dyddeling as descendants of Dyddel, this may throw some light on
-Detling in Kent.
-
-
-—MERE = lake, or gemæru boundary. Lakes are few in Kent, so Baddlesmere
-may indicate a boundary, while Mereworth (anciently Marewe) may indicate
-neither. Mearesflete in Thanet, and Mere, a manor in Rainham, may point
-to a personal name. Walmer is said to be named from the marshy ground
-behind the Wall, or old raised beach, which begins by Walmer Castle.
-
-
-Brōc = a brook, as in the dialects of Kent and Sussex, also low-lying
-ground, not necessarily with running water. So Brook, and Brookland, and
-Kidbrook.
-
-
-Burna = stream. So Bourne, Littlebourne, etc.
-
-
-Cnoll = hillock (Cnol in Welsh and knöl in Swedish). So Knole, and
-perhaps Knockholt.
-
-
-Cop = a top or head, German kopf. Our Copt Point.
-
-Cumb, or comb = a hollow in a hillside, or a narrow valley. So Ulcombe.
-A word borrowed from the Celtic.
-
-
-Dell = low ground or valley. Hence Deal.
-
-
-Ēā = water, river. So Stur-ea, now Sturry, or watery land. So probably
-Romney, from Ruimea. But ey also is īēg, or ēg = an island. Sceapige,
-now Isle of Sheppey.
-
-
-Denu is a valley, and denn a retreat, but these often interchange in
-early forms with dun, which survives in our downs, and Down, the
-village.
-
-
-Ford.—Here we have to distinguish between the Saxon ford (a natural
-place-name when bridges as yet were few), and fiord, which is purely
-coastal, and comes from our Norse marauders. Thus Ashford and Deptford
-come from quite different words.
-
-
-Grāf, in Saxon, is our grove, so that Ashgrove is pure Saxon, Æsc-graf.
-
-
-Heall means a hall, or larger house, and may be simply the Latin aula,
-especially as place-names ending in hall are more frequent near Roman
-centres. But there is also halk, a corner or angle, which may suit other
-places. Our several Whitehalls would indicate the former word.
-
-
-The Saxon HEATH survives unaltered in some cases, and also as Hoath, and
-perhaps as Hoth in Hothfield.
-
-
-Hlinc, a slope, accounts for the Linch and Linchfield in Detling, a
-cultivated slope at the foot of the Downs. More common in Sussex.
-Golfers will recognise the word.
-
-
-Hōh = a hough or heel of land, whence our Hundred of Hoo.
-
-
-Hyrcg is our ridge, and names Eridge, and Colbridge, and Sundridge.
-
-
-Hyll = our hill, partly names many places, Bosehill, Hinxhill, Maze
-Hill, Ide Hill, etc.; but I think there are more in Sussex, where
-Roberts enumerates forty-eight.
-
-
-Mersc = march—whence Stodmarsh, Burmarsh, Mersham, Westmarsh, Marshton.
-
-
-Ofer and Ora are difficult to distinguish in use, the former meaning
-bank or shore and the latter bank of a stream. Bilnor and Oare may come
-from the former, and Bicknor and Denover (on the Beult) from the latter.
-
-
-Ell, WIELL, WYLL, as a prefix, becomes our well.
-
-
-Wudu = wood. So Saltwood is Sautwud in 1230.
-
-
-Beorg = a hill, dative beorge, is easily confused with Burg = bush,
-dative byrg, a fortified place, and then a city. From the former we get
-our modern beogh, ber or barrow; from the latter our prefix Bur, and the
-suffixes borough, burg, boro, and bury. The first syllable of Bearsted
-may be either Beorg or Beorc, birch. Canterbury is the burg or fortified
-city of the Cantwara or Kent-folk.
-
-
-Hlu = a burial mound, developing later into the suffix low, lane, and
-lew, may be found in Hadlow, and perhaps in the Hundreds of Ryngelo and
-Cornilo in the Lathe of Borowart (now S. Augustine’s).
-
-
-Considering the mainly forestal character of Saxon Kent, it is not
-strange that many places are named from trees. Thus Ac = oak, appears in
-Ockholt, Ackhanger, Ockley. Æsc in Ashford, Ashhurst, and several Ashes.
-Our Nursted was Nutstede earlier. Perhaps to Ac also we may refer
-Hocker’s Lane in Detling as a prefix to another Saxon word, ofer, a
-shore or bring, though it may also be but a corruption of Oakham. In
-numerous place-names, especially those derived from trees, we find this
-suffix: Oakover (in Derbyshire), Ashover, Haselover, Birchover, commonly
-shortened into Oaker, Asher, Hasler, and Bircher. So the lane near the
-oak-tree or oak-wood would be Oakover Lane, Oaker or Ocker Lane, and
-eventually Hocker’s Lane. With but one cottage in it, I can find no
-tradition or trace of any personal name from which it might be called.
-
-
-Apuldor, as for appletree, remains in Appledore; Birce or beorc, perhaps
-in Bearsted, Birchington (?), Bekehurst.
-
-
-Box, or byxe (derived from the Latin buxus) names many places, and early
-forms in Bex, Bix, Bux, are found both as to Boxley and Bexley, as with
-Boxhill and Bexhill in other counties.
-
-
-Holegn = holen, adj. of holly, survives in Hollingbourne and Holborough;
-Per (pear) in Perhamstead; Cherry in Cheriton; Plum in Plumstead; Elm in
-Elmley, Elmstone, Elmstead, but only the wych-elm was indigenous, and
-called Wice by the Saxons. Thorn we find in Thornham.
-
-
-Haga, a Saxon name survives in our Hawthorn, and may help us to
-understand the meaning of Eythorne, near Dover, and the Hundred of
-Eyhorne, in which Detling is situated. The early name of Eythorne is
-Hegythorne, _i.e._, Hawthorn, and the Hundred of Eythorde or Eyhorne (so
-from 1347 A.D.) might well be the same, and named from the hamlet of
-Iron Street is Hollingbourne, where Iron is plainly a late corruption of
-an old word.
-
-
-The Rev. E. McClure, in his _British Place-Names_, gives (p. 207 _et
-seqq._) a list of words in old Saxon glossaries, ranging from the 7th to
-the 9th centuries, which appear in British place-names. I extract those
-which seem to apply to place-names in Kent.
-
-
-Bodan = bottom, common in Kent for a narrow valley, _e.g._, East Bottom
-at Kingsdown, near Walmer.
-
-
-Hœgu-thorn = hedge-thorn, hawthorn, whence our Eythorne (anciently
-Hegythe Thorne), Hundred of Eyhorne (Haythorn, temp. Henry III.), and
-Iron Street, a hamlet in Hollingbourne in that Hundred.
-
-
-Mapuldur = maple-tree, in our Maplescombe, _i.e._, the bowl-shaped
-valley where maples abound.
-
-
-Holegn = holly. Our Hollingbourne, and perhaps Hollandon.
-
-
-Holt-hona = woodcock, or more exactly woodhen, like moorhen. Worhona is
-Saxon for pheasant. So our Henhurst, Henwood, and Hengrove are the same.
-
-
-Boece = beech. So our Mark Beech and Bough Beech, near Chiddingstone.
-This derivation is also one of those suggested for Bearsted, whereof the
-Saxon name is Beorhham-stede, and the first syllable would be either
-Beorg-hill or Beorc-beech.
-
-
-Goss = furze. Gorsley Wood, in Bishopsbourne.
-
-
-Fleota = estuary or creek. Our Northfleet, Southfleet, Ebbsfleet, and
-Mearesflete, and Flete.
-
-
-Haesl = hazel. Hazelwood Hill, in Boughton Malherbe.
-
-
-Beber = beaver. Beavers flourished in England even in historical times,
-and gave their name to Beverley, Beaverbrook, etc. May Beaver, near
-Ashford, derive thus? And the Beverley at Canterbury?
-
-
-Pearroc = literally a grating—a place fenced in for deer, etc. So Park
-and Paddock. Paddock Wood.
-
-
-Hreed = reed. Our Reedham possibly; but it is not on marshy ground.
-
-
-Hythae = a harbour. Our Hythe, Greenhythe, New Hythe (East Malling),
-Small Hythe (Tenterden), West Hythe, and Erith (Erehithe—the old
-landing-place for Lesnes Abbey on the Thames).
-
-
-Thyrne = thorn. Our Thornham.
-
-
-Cisil = gravel. Our Chislehurst (Cyselhurst in 973), or gravelly wood.
-
-
-Cnol = hill-top, as in Knowle, Knowle Hill (in Boughton Malherbe), and
-Knowlton.
-
-
-Beyr = shed, cottage. Dr. Sweet makes it the same as Bur (modern Bower).
-Hence perhaps our Burham and Burmarsh; but the old forms of Burham would
-point rather to Borow or Borough—the walled settlement.
-
-
-Aesc = ash. Our Ash, Ashenden, Ashford, Ashley, and Ashurst.
-
-
-Hlep = leap. Hence Hartlip, of old Hertelepe. There are two places thus
-named.
-
-
-Pirge = pear tree. Possibly Perrywood and Perry Street. And Perhamstede
-according to authorities.
-
-
-Plum-treu = plum tree. Hence Plumstead—and Plumpton?
-
-
-Faerh = a young pig, whence our word “farrow.” Considering that the
-rearing of swine was the chief occupation in the dens, I wonder that no
-one has suggested this word for the first syllable of Farleigh and
-Fairlight.
-
-
-Brycg = bridge. The Saxon had the word, but not many bridges. Most of
-our eleven place-names in Kent containing this word are of post-Saxon
-date, while we have fifteen “fords.”
-
-
-Sae = sea. So our Seasalter and Seabrook.
-
-
-Aac = oak. We have Ackholt, Acol, Acryse, Oakhurst, Oakley, and Ockholt
-(now Knockholt).
-
-Elm, borrowed from the Latin Ulmus. The Witch-elm, called Wice in Saxon,
-is indigenous, the other elm imported. We have Elmley, Elmstead, and
-Elmstone.
-
-
-Mistel = mistletoe (ta. fem.—tdig) may appear in Mistleham, near
-Appledore.
-
-
-Caelf = calf. The Saxon name for Challock was Caelf-loca-n, _i.e._,
-enclosed place for calves. The second syllable suggests the Latin locus,
-but is the source of our English Lock, _i.e._, shut up. So the locks on
-the river; and pounds for straying cattle are “lokes” in East Anglia.
-
-
-Pleg-huses = theatres (or recreation grounds). Our Plaistow and Plaxtol.
-
-
-Syla = wallowing place. So our numerous Soles, which I later enumerate.
-
-
-Dimhus and Dimhof = hiding or dark place. Our Dymchurch are instances.
-
-
-Crocc and Hweras are both Saxon for pots. Few know what pure Saxon they
-use when they talk of crockery-ware. Pottery was always a great industry
-from Sittingbourne to Sheppey, and the Romans appreciated and extended
-it. This may account for our Crokham Hill, Crockham, Crockhurst Street,
-and Crockshard.
-
-
-Cocca, gen. plural = chickens. Cock St., Cockham Wood, Cockshill,
-Coxheath, Cockadam Shaw, while in Detling we have Cock-hill, Upper and
-Lower Cox Street. Some may, of course, be modern and personal names; but
-I cannot so trace them.
-
-
-Boley Hill, near Rochester, was undoubtedly a place of civic importance
-in very early days. It was a Danish meeting place corresponding to our
-shire-mote at Pennington Heath, and we may best trace its name to a
-Danish word which we still use—the bole of a tree. This is found in
-various parts of the Danish district of Lincolnshire, and the reference
-may be to the hill with a famous tree under which the court of the
-community was held. Trees, as well as cromlechs or great stones, were
-common landmarks in Saxon times—hence our various Stones in Kent.
-Others, however, consider it a corruption of Beaulieu, a name given by
-the Templars to the sites of their preceptories, and they instance a
-Boley or Bully Mead in East London, which belonged to the Templars. And
-others, because of its ancient legal associations, think it should be
-Bailey Hill, and refer us to the Old Bailey in London.
-
-
-Farleigh.—On a clear day from Detling Hill we can see, not only
-Farleigh, near Maidstone, but Fairlight Church, near Hastings. In Saxon
-days and documents these place-names were the same, and so in Domesday
-(1086), each is Ferlega, the passage or fareing through the pastures or
-leys, just as our modern Throwley is Trulega, with the scribes’
-variations in 12th century deeds of Thruleghe, Trulleda, Trulea,
-Thrulege, and Trudlege. Fairlight, therefore, is simply a modern
-corruption after a fashion which once corrupted the name of Leigh, near
-Tonbridge, which I find written Legh in 1435, Ligth in 1513, Lyghe in
-1525, and Lyght in 1531. It has been suggested that the first syllable
-may indicate a personal name, Fær; but this seems less tenable.
-
-
-Borstall, from the Anglo-Saxon Beorg, a hill, and stal, a dwelling (as
-in Tunstall), means a path up a steep hill. So there is Borstall Hill
-near Rochester, Bostall Hill near Woolwich, and Borstall Hill by
-Whitstable. And I have noted a passage in White’s _Selborne_—he made a
-path up the wooded steep hill near his vicarage called the Hanger, and
-he writes: “Now the leaf is down, the Bostall discovers itself in a
-faint, delicate line running up the Hanger.”
-
-
-Eastry.—Lambarde thought this village was so named to distinguish it
-from West-Rye, now called simply Rye, but the places are too far apart,
-especially when the great forest of Anderida came between them. McClure,
-our most recent authority on British place-names, would refer it to the
-Rugii, a Continental clan from the Island of Rugen in the Baltic, whom
-he finds represented in Sûthryge (Surrey). So he would make the word
-East-ryge, and in a charter of 780 it is Eastrygena, and in another
-Eastryge. But amongst the various early spellings is Eastereye, _i.e._,
-Eástoregg (No, not Easter Egg!), the island of Eástor. In a will of 929,
-“Æthelnoth, the reeve to Eastorege,” is mentioned. Now the next parish
-is Woodnesborough, the town of Woden, the Saxon god. So here may well
-be, named at the same time and by the same people, the name of Eástor,
-the goddess of spring; while, as to its suffix, the centre of the
-village stands higher than the rest, and is almost entirely surrounded
-by a valley, though not now by water. Fewer greater authorities than
-Professor Skeat are to be found, and he inclines to this interpretation.
-
-
-Folkestone.—Here we find several interpretations, the more modern being
-the most absurd. Thus Phillipott suggests the town full of folk! and
-Murray’s Handbook to Kent Fulke’s Town (whoever this Fulke may have
-been)! Both, however, forgot that the final syllable is always stane or
-stone, and not ton. Another imaginative worthy says that its stone
-quarries were much used in the 13th and 14th centuries, and belonged to
-the community, and so it was the Folks’ Stone! Folcland we know;
-Folcmote we know; but what is this? The _Anglo Saxon Chronicle_ says
-that Harold seized ships at Folcesstane, and in Domesday it appears as
-Falchestan. Harris simply Latinizes the name and calls it Lapis populi,
-the stone of the people, and as in Ninnius (8th cent.) there is a
-reference in his description of England to the “stone of inscription on
-the Gallic sea,” which some would identify with Folkestone; he may be
-more right than he knew.
-
-
-Plaxtol, near Sevenoaks.—In many Kentish parishes (and elsewhere) the
-name Pleystole or Playstool clings to a piece of land on which miracle
-and other plays were acted when amusements had to be mainly home-grown.
-So at Lynsted, Herbert Finch, in the sixth year of Queen Elizabeth,
-bequeathed the “Playstall et Playstollcroft” fields. A variant of the
-name we may find in Plaistow, by Bromley. So in Selborne (Gilbert
-White’s renowned village) the Plestor is the old playground. Would that
-in all villages, especially since the looting of old commons, there
-might be a field thus consecrated to healthy recreation.
-
-
-Amongst the sources of enlightenment as to the meaning of our
-place-names I have turned to the volume of the English Dialect Society,
-which is on the _Kentish Dialect and Provincialisms_, and was prepared
-by the Revs. W. D. Parish and W. F. Shaw. It does not contain, as I have
-found, nearly all our local words, and not a few of the words it does
-give are by any means peculiar to Kent. Still, it is useful and
-interesting, and it may well be that some of our Kent place-names are
-almost peculiar to Kent, especially as the neighbouring counties of
-Sussex and Essex were populated by Saxons, but Kent was populated by the
-Jutes, and no doubt their common tongue had its tribal variations. I
-take from this dictionary all the words which are illustrative of
-place-names.
-
-
-Forstall = “a farm-yard before a house; a paddock near a farm house; or
-the farm buildings.... As a local name, Forestalls seem to have abounded
-in Kent.” Two instances are given; but I have noted Broken Forestall,
-Buckley; Clare’s Forestall, Throwley; Mersham Forstall; Forstall Farm,
-Egerton; The Forstall, Hunton; Preston Forstall, Wingham; Painter’s
-Forestall, Ospringe; Hunter’s Forstall, Herne; Fostal, Herne Hill;
-Forstall, Lenham; Forstall, Aylesford; Shepherd’s Forstall,
-Sheldwich—and no doubt there are more.
-
-
-Tye.—“An extensive common pasture, such as Waldershare Tie and Old
-Wives’ Lees Tie, and in a document of 1510, a croft called Wolves’ Tie.”
-I would add the places called Olantigh, one near Wye and another near
-Fordwich. Teig-r is really a Norse word meaning a piece of grassland,
-and when borrowed or used by the Saxons it became Tigar, Tig and Tey in
-such place-names as Mark’s Tey.
-
-
-Yokelet.—“An old name in Kent for a little farm or manor.” Cake’s Yoke
-is the name of a farm in Crundale. The yoke was a measure of land,
-probably such as one yoke of oxen could plough. Thus it corresponds to
-the Latin jugum, which means a yoke, and also a land measure. We have
-also West Yoke in Ash-next-Ridley; Yoklet, a borough in Waltham; land so
-named in Saltwood; and Ickham was of old Yeckham or Ioccham, from the
-A.S. yeok, a yoke of arable land. Iocclet is also given in the
-dictionary as a Kenticism for a small farm.
-
-
-Bodge.—“A measure of corn, about a bushel.” May this suggest a
-derivation for Bodgebury, some land with a cottage thereon, part of the
-old glebe of Detling?
-
-
-Brent.—“The Middle-English word Brent most commonly meant burnt; but
-there was another Brent, an adjective which signified steep.” Thus
-Brentwood in Essex is the same as Burnt Wood in Detling, but the Brents
-or North Preston near Faversham, and the Brent Gate therein refer to the
-steep contour of the land. A Celtic root, found in Welsh as bryn, a
-ridge, accounts for many such names as Brendon Hill, Birwood Forest,
-Brandon, a ridge in Essex, Breandown near Weston-super-Mare, and many
-Swiss and German names for steep places.
-
-
-Court, or Court Lodge.—“The manor house, where the court leet of the
-manor is held.” So in Detling we have East Court and West Court because,
-in default of a son, the old manor was divided between two co-heiresses
-in the 16th century. So we have as place-names North Court in Eastling,
-a Court at Street in Lympne, besides very many names of old houses, such
-as Eastry Court, Selling Court, etc.
-
-
-Down.—“A piece of high open ground, not peculiar to Kent, but perhaps
-more used here than elsewhere. Thus we have Updown in Eastry, Hartsdown
-and Northdown in Thanet, Leysdown in Sheppey, and Barham Downs.” I may
-add Puttock’s Down (the Kite’s Down), three villages called Kingsdown,
-Derry Downs, Downe, Hackemdown, Harble Down, Housedown, Kilndown, two
-Underdowns, besides probably some of the names ending in don. The Celtic
-dun, a hill-fortress, found all over Europe, is directly found in our
-Croydon, as in London, Dunstable, etc., and the Saxon extended its use,
-especially in the plural, to high ground, whether crowned with a fort or
-camp or not. Trevisa wrote in 1398 “A downe is a lytel swellynge or
-aresynge (arising) of erthe passynge the playne ground ... and not
-retchyng to hyghnesse of an hylle.”
-
-
-Fright or Frith.—“A thin, scrubby wood.” So the Fright Woods near
-Bedgebury. And I learned to skate as a boy at the Fright Farm on Dover
-Castle Hill. This may account for Frith by Newnham, and possibly also
-for Frittenden.
-
-
-Polder.—“A marsh: a piece of boggy soil.” A place in Eastry now called
-Felder land was of old Polder land, and nearer Sandwich is a place still
-called Polders. Poll (Celtic), Pool (Early English), Proll (Welsh), is a
-common prefix to the name of a brook. Polhill, however, in Harrietsham,
-is more likely to come from the great Kent family of the Polhills. So we
-have Polhill Farm in Detling, and a Polhill was Vicar in 1779.
-
-
-Rough.—“A small wood; any rough, woody place.” So Bushy Rough in the
-Alkham Valley, where rises one of the sources of the river Dour. Hence
-also Rough Hills in Hernhill; Rough Common near Canterbury; and perhaps
-Roughway in Plaxtol, the wood being used in the Kentish rather than the
-usual sense.
-
-
-Saltings, or Salterns, or Salts.—“Salt marshes on the sea-side of the
-sea-walls.” A North Kent word, naming Saltbox, and Salterns, both in
-Sheppey, and probably Seasalter near Whitstable. We must find, however,
-if we can, another derivation for Saltwood Castle.
-
-
-Selynge.—Toll, custom, tribute. The Prior of Christ Church, Canterbury,
-used to take in the Stoure a certain custom, which was called Selynge,
-of every little boat which came to an anchor before the mouth of the
-said Flete. The compilers of the Dictionary say: “The parish of
-Sellindge, near Hythe, probably takes its name from some such ancient
-payment.” Is it possible that the old name of Sentlynge, given to S.
-Mary’s Cray in Domesday Book, may point to another place of tolling
-craft on the Cray?
-
-
-
-
- The Northmen in Kent.
-
-
-A _Furore Normanorum_ was a petition in an old litany in England before
-it had gained that name. And with reason, for the success of Angles,
-Jutes and Saxons in the conquest of England drew the attention of
-Scandinavian and other Vikings, who found that booty could be gained by
-rapid raids. It was at the end of the eighth century that the Danes (as
-they came to be called, although the wider “Northmen” would be a better
-term), reached the land of the Angles, coming from Norway to Dorset, and
-generally harrying the eastern and southern coasts for a couple of
-hundred years. They also remained and settled, mainly to the north of
-the Humber, until at last the greater part of England came under their
-power, and in 1016 Cnut became the Danish King of England.
-
-Our forefathers in Kent should have our sympathy for the continuous
-state of alarm in which they were kept. In 832 Scandinavian pirates
-ravaged Sheppey. In 838 they won a battle in Merscware (_i.e._, the land
-of the Marsh-folk, _i.e._, Romney Marsh), and slew many in Canterbury.
-In 851 nine of their piratical ships were taken in battle at Londovic
-(Sandwich) by Æthelstan, the under-king of Kent; but they remained to
-winter in Thanet for the first time, and in the same year 350 of their
-ships entered the Thames and took both Cantwaraburg and Lundenburg
-(London). In 853 the men of Kent, under the Alderman Ealchere, with the
-men of Surrey, fought in Tenet (Thanet), but were worsted. Next year
-they wintered in Sceap-ige (Sheppey). In 865 the men of Kent tried to
-buy off the heathen invaders, who, however, ravaged all East Kent.
-
-Then arose the great man, Alfred, who in 871 had eight battles with the
-Danes south of the Thames. In 885 they besieged Hrofceastre (Rochester),
-but King Alfred relieved it, and the Danes took to their ships, having
-lost all their horses. In 893 two hundred and fifty Danish ships came to
-Limenemouth (Lympne), took their fleet four miles up the river, and made
-a strong fort at Apuldore, while Hasting with 80 ships entered the
-Thames estuary, made a fort at Milton, and later one at Sceobyrig
-(Shoebury). In 969 Eadger orders Tenet land to be pillaged, and in 980
-Thanet is overrun by the Danes. In 986 the bishopric of Hrofceastre was
-devastated. In 993 a fleet of nearly four hundred ships came to “Stone,”
-which may be the one in the Isle of Oxney, or another near Faversham on
-the Watling Street, or another on the Swale, and went on to Sandwic,
-which was their chief southern haven, and embodies in its name the
-Scandinavian wic or bay (Sandwic is a common place-name in Iceland and
-Norway).
-
-In 994 Anlaf, King of Norway, and Sweyn, King of Denmark, with a fleet
-of nearly 500, failed to take London, but ravaged Kent and other
-counties. In 998 they sailed up the Medway estuary to Rochester, and
-there beat the Kentish army. In 1005 a fleet came to Sandwic and
-despoiled the country.
-
-In 1007 England despaired, and paid a tribute of £36,000, while
-Thurkell’s army came to Sandwich and thence to Canterbury, where the
-people of East Kent bought peace at the cost of £3,000, while the Danes
-spent the winter in repairing their ships. In 1012 they took Canterbury
-and martyred the Archbishop Ælfheah, better known to us as S. Alphege.
-In 1013 Sweyn came again to Sandwich; but in 1014 Eadmund (Edmund
-Etheling) attacked the Danes in Kent, drove them into Sheppey, and met
-their leader in battle at Æglesforda (Avlesford). But in 1016 Cnut
-(Canute) became King of all England, and to him in 1018 £72,000 was paid
-in tribute.
-
-In 1203 the body of S. Alphege was allowed by Cnut to be taken to
-Canterbury, and England remained a Danish province. In 1040 Harda-Cnut
-was brought from Bruges to succeed Harold as King, and landed at
-Sandwich. In 1046 Thanet was ravaged again by the Northmen; but in 1049
-King Edward gathered a great fleet at Sandwich against Sweyn, and later
-this fleet lay at Dærentamutha (_i.e._, Darentmouth, _i.e._ Dartford).
-In 1051 King Edward’s brother-in-law, Eustace, lost some followers in a
-fracas at Dofra (Dover).
-
-But a great change was imminent, and England was to change one
-domination for another, and in 1052 Wilhelm (afterwards the Conqueror)
-visited King Edward the Confessor (or Saint) with a great host of
-Normans, and he exiled Earl Godwin, who came from Bruges to Nœsse
-(Dungeness) was driven back. Returning with his son Harold to Dungeness,
-they took all the ships they could find at Rumenea (Romney), Heda
-(Hythe), and Folcesstane. Thence to Dofra and Sandwich, ending up with
-ravaging Sheppey and Middeltun (Milton, near Sittingbourne). Then, in
-1066, Harold dies in battle at Hastings, and William begins our Norman
-dynasty, Northmen being succeeded by Normans.
-
-Traces of the visits to Kent are found in various place-names, though
-more common in other parts of Britain, and indeed in other countries,
-since as marauders, colonists, or conquerors they were for three
-centuries the terror of Europe, from Iceland to Italy. The many places
-with the suffixes byr or by, thorpe, throp, or trop, toft, thwaite,
-ville in Normandy, or well and will in England, garth, beck, haugh,
-with, tarn, dale, force, fell, are all almost exclusively northern to
-Kent and mainly Norwegian. As to “by” for town, there are 600 north of
-the Thames and east of Watling Street, and hardly any in the south. The
-one apparent exception in Kent—Horton Kirkby—is no exception, for it was
-simply Horton until the time of Edward the First, when Roger de Kirkby,
-_from Lancashire_, married a Kentish heiress and the manor and place
-were re-named after him.
-
-We have, however, certain records of their piratical visits, as at
-Deptford and Fordwich, where the termination is not the Anglo-Saxon
-ford, meaning a passage across a river, but the Norse fiord, a roadstead
-for ships. Deptford is the deep fiord, where ships could anchor close to
-the bank, and Fordwich, the smallest “limb” of the Cinque Ports, was
-once the port of Canterbury on the Stour, and gives us wic, the Norse
-for station for ships, a small creek or bay. So, in Kent, we have also
-from the same source Wick in Romney Marsh, Greenwich, Woolwich, and
-Sandwich. Inland, however, Wich or Wick, is an Anglo-Saxon borrowing
-from the Latin vicus, and means houses or a village.
-
-Another Norse word in Kent is Ness or Naze, a nose or promontory, such
-as Dungeness, Shoeburyness, Pepperness, Foulness, Shellness, Sheerness,
-Sharpness Cliff at Dover, whence criminals were hurled, Whiteness,
-Foreness, Bartlett Ness and Oakham Ness. The Nore, in Kent, is the
-Norse, or perhaps Jutish, Nôr, a bay with a narrow entrance, and the
-word is unique in Britain, unless we may find it also in Normarsh, near
-Rainham. Again attributable to our invaders, and again purely coastal,
-are the places ending in _fliot_, a small river or creek, such as
-Northfleet, Southfleet, Ebbsfleet, with Purfleet on the opposite bank of
-the Thames. Thanet and Sheppey were for us their chief points of attack
-and their naval stations, while the Danelagh or Kingdom whence the Norse
-element predominated had the Wash as the chief entrance whence they
-radiated out.
-
-The suffix “gate” may be either from the Saxon geat or the Scandinavian
-gata, but when we find Ramsgate, Dargate, Margate, Westgate, Kingsgate,
-Snargate, and Sandgate, all on the coast, while in Romney Marsh “gut”
-takes the place of “gate,” as in Jervis Kut, Clobesden Gut, and Denge
-Marsh Gut, we may incline to a Scandinavian origin.
-
-It is in the north, and the north only according to the best
-authorities, that the suffix ing represents the Norse _eng_ for
-grass-land.
-
-
-
-
- The Islands of Kent.
-
-
-Most islands are attached portions of the nearest mainland, severed in
-prehistoric times by subsidence of the intervening soil and the action
-of strong currents. Thus even England is a portion of the Continent, as
-its fauna and flora proclaim, while Ireland was severed earlier still.
-Thus also the Isle of Wight is Hampshire. So our Kentish islands, now
-only two and neither now to be effectually circumnavigated, are
-practically absorbed in the mainland. “Sheppey, Thanet—what else?” most
-would say. Yet the early geographer Nennius, writing in the eighth
-century, has the following quaint passage:—“The first marvel is the
-Lommon Marsh” (_i.e._, Limen, now Romney), “for in it are 340 islands
-with men and women living on them. It is girt by 340 rocks, and in every
-rock is an eagle’s nest, and 340 rivers run into it, and there goes out
-of it into the sea but one river, which is called the Lemn.” Truly a
-picturesque account of the numerous spots, where dry land first appeared
-in the shallow bay, and the countless sluices which intersected them.
-
-
-“Romney” is probably formed by the addition of the Saxon Ige, By, or
-Ea—island, to the earlier Celtic Ruim—marsh, and so gives an idea of
-what the district was before the Romans reclaimed much by building their
-great Rhee Wall. Certain names in Romney Marsh preserved the same
-history. Oxeney (still we have the Island and the Hundred of Oxney,
-containing Wittersham and Stone parishes) is even now insulated by two
-branches of the Rother, and here, in the ancient and now diverted
-channel, was found in 1824 an oaken ship buried deep in sand and mud.
-Its name is said to mean the isle of the fat beeves. On pagan altars
-discovered there oxen were carved, and still it is a great
-cattle-raising district. We should look now in vain for the three
-ferries by which it was once entered. In its centre is Ebony, no doubt
-originally a sort of island, once called “Ebeney in Oxney,” and in an
-early document it appears as Hibbene. It has been suggested that the
-first part of the word is the old Celtic Avon, _i.e._, water or river,
-and I find that a Saxon charter of 793 A.D. calls the Gloucester Avon by
-the name of Aben. The third syllable is, of course, the Saxon word for
-island. Scotney Court, Lydd, and Scotney Castle, Lamberhurst, no doubt
-preserve the name of the Barons de Scotini, who came from Scotigny in
-North France, and possessed, in the 12th century, much land, which they
-held until the reign of Edward the Third, while Scot’s Hall, near
-Smeeth, was the seat of Knights of that name down to the time of the
-Armada. But for this history one might have classed Scotney with Oxney
-and Ebony.
-
-
-Coming now to Sheppey, still an island, washed on the north by the
-estuary of the Thames, on the west by that of the Medway, and insulated
-by the Swale (Saxon Suala), crossed by a railway bridge and two ferries,
-the Celtic name is said to have been Malata, from Mohlt, a sheep, which
-the Saxon conquerors translated into Sceap-ige, Sheep Isle. It includes
-Elmley and Harty, once its little islands, and now peninsulas. An old
-name for Harty was Hertai, in which we may perhaps find the Saxon
-Heorat—stag, hart—as in Hartlip and Hartbourne, and ea—island. And
-Elmley, which island would simply denote the ley or glade in the forest
-in which elms were frequent, might here be Elm-isle. And another islet
-was Graven-ea, the grain island, on the opposite side of the Swale, now
-in the Faversham marshes.
-
-
-Thanet, the best known and most important island, was in the 5th century
-separated from the mainland by the Wantsum and the estuary of the Stour,
-which gave an expanse of water mainly two miles broad, so that vessels
-from or to London sailed from Reculver to Richborough, and avoided the
-longer and rougher route round the North Foreland. To guard this sea-way
-the Romans had placed their forts of Regulbium (Reculver) and Rutupia
-(Richborough) at its northern and eastern entrance. Now, and for long,
-by the dwindling of the Stour and the practical extinction of the
-Wantsum, Thanet is but in name an island. Even writing in 1570, Lambarde
-calls it a peninsula. It is said that its Celtic name was Rimn—a
-headland, and that its later Saxon name, Tenet, means a beacon. Solinus,
-who wrote about A.D. 80, calls it Ad-Tanatos (Thanatos, Greek for Death,
-because its soil killed snakes even when exported for that purpose!).
-Nennius, in the 8th century, says Guorthigern handed to Hengist and
-Horsa the island, “which in their language is called Tenet, but in
-British speech Ruoihm,” or Ru-oichim. In a charter of 679 it appears as
-Tenid. The name, says McClure, may involve the Celtic Tann for oaks, as
-in Glastenec, an early form of Glastonbury, surviving in the English,
-Tanner, Tanyard, etc. From this root is derived the Breton place-name
-Tannouet. Tenid is its oldest Saxon form, and the _Saxon Chronicle_
-records that in 969 Eadgar ordered Tenetland to be pillaged.
-
-
-
-
- Variations in the Spelling of Place-Names.
-
-
-In the search for the meaning of a place-name it is necessary to go back
-as far as possible and discover, if we can, its earliest form. The
-_Anglo Saxon Chronicle_, and the later Domesday Book of 1086; the
-gradual blending of Saxon and Norman into the English tongue; and then
-the invention of printing; all may have had an effect on the
-pronunciation, and so the spelling, of a word. Also there is the
-tendency to shorten a long word, as when Pepingeberia becomes Pembury,
-or Godwinston, through Gusseton, becomes Guston. And before the
-standardization of spelling which printing to a great extent effected,
-and in written documents such as charters or wills, the most remarkable
-variations will occur according to personal varieties of pronunciation.
-Even now, though every one reads “I am going,” in one county you may
-hear “I’m a gowin’,” in another “I be gooin’,” in another “I be gwaine,”
-and so forth, and so one wonders less at the various forms in which a
-name appears in writing in Saxon, in Norman, or in Early English days.
-
-As a general rule the earliest form will be best and most likely to
-indicate why a name was given. To illustrate this source, both of
-information and of error, let me take two Kentish
-place-names—Westenhanger and Tenterden—giving the dates at which I find
-the various forms.
-
-
-Westenhanger.—There is a Teutonic stem hanh which means to hang, with
-the Anglo-Saxon later forms, Hôn, Hêng, from which we get our place
-names of hanger, Ongar, etc. A hanger is a wood or copse hanging on the
-side of a hill, and in Kent we find Betteshanger, Hangherst, and
-Ackhanger, as well as Westenhanger, concerning which Leland in his
-Itinerary writes of “Ostinhaungre ... of sum now corruptly called
-Westenanger.” I find it spelled Ostrynghangre in 1274 and 1291,
-Westynghangre in 1343, Westingangre in 1346, Ostrynhangre in 1376 and
-1381, Estynghangre in 1383, Westynganger in 1385, Ostynhangre in 1409,
-Ostrynghanger in 1468, Westinganger in 1472, Ostrynhanger in 1478,
-Westynghanger in 1511, Westhanger in 1519, and Oystenhanger in 1541. The
-changes of the first syllable illustrate the continuance of the Saxon
-Wœst and the Norman Ouest until there is the reversion to the Saxon form
-in our West.
-
-
-Tenterden, again, has a long list of variants. Probably its Saxon name
-indicated the place where the Theinwarden, or Thane’s Warden or
-Guardian, looked after the rights and dues of various other dens where
-his swine had pannage and his tenants tended them. It is not mentioned
-in Domesday, as not of sufficient importance or taxability; but in 1190
-I find it as Tentwarden, in 1252 as Thendwardenne and Tentwardenn, in
-1255 as Tentwardene—this early and probably original form cropping up at
-intervals for another three hundred years. But in 1259 we get nearer to
-the extant form, as Tendyrdenn. In 1300 there is Tenterdenne, and in
-1311 Tentredenne. From this point I take the spellings from the
-Archbishop’s register of the institutions of its parish priests, and
-here the earliest record is Tenterdenne in 1311. Thenceforward
-Tent’denne and Tant’denn in 1322, Tentrdenn in 1327, Tenterdenne in
-1333, Tentwardene in 1342, Tenterdenne in 1346, Tentwardyn in 1390,
-Tynterden in 1394, Tent’den in 1404, Tenterden (for the first time
-exactly in its present form) in 1407, Tendirden in 1436, Tentwarden at
-various dates from 1464 to 1531, Tentreden in 1501 and 1525, Tenterden
-in 1511, 1523, 1539, and 1546, “Tentwarden alias Tenterden” in 1541,
-Tynterden in 1546, Tenterden in 1556, Tentwarden in 1560, Tenterden in
-1571 and 1615, Tentarden in 1619, Tendarden in 1626, Tentarden in 1627
-and 1636. Henceforth it is always Tenterden in the Lambeth Registers.
-These variations are the more noticeable as all occurring in one office,
-where one would have expected a settled and continuously adopted form,
-whereas in such documents as wills the testator, or even the scrivener
-who wrote the will, would have only the current or the personal idea as
-to the right spelling of a name.
-
-
-Elsewhere I have given variations of the places we now know as
-Edenbridge, Cuxton, Shepherdswell, Bethersden, Eastry, Throwley, etc.
-One might add the cases of Freondesbyry (Saxon), Frandesberie
-(Domesday), Frenesbery, and Frendesbury, for our Frindsbury; of
-Estbarbrenge, Barmyage, Barmling, Barmelinge, and Berblinge, for our
-Barming; Æpledure (Saxon), Apeldres (Domesday), Apoldre (1381), Apeltre,
-Appledrau, and Appuldre, for our Appledore; of Pœdlewrtha (Saxon),
-Pellesorde (Domesday), and Pallesford, for our three Paddlesworths;
-Hertlepeshille (temp. Edw. II.), Herclepe, Hertelepe, and Harclypp
-(1534), for our Hartlip; and Ok’olte (_i.e._, Oak Wood), Ocholte,
-Sud-Acholt, Scottesocholt, and Nokeholde, for our Knockholt. The
-etymological advantage of going back is seen in the case of Ringwould,
-which becomes more intelligible when down to the time of Henry 3rd it
-was known as Ridelinwalde or Rydelynewelde (_i.e._, the settlement of
-the clan of Ryddeling by the wood), whereas not till 1476 do I find
-Ringeweld, and Ringewold in 1502.
-
-
-
-
- Ecclesiastical Place-Names.
-
-
-There are not so many as one would expect considering the importance and
-power and the possessions of the Church in Kent. Taking some as they
-occur to me, there are All Hallows, in Sheppey, so named from the
-dedication of its church to All Saints’. The Latin Sanctus and the
-Teutonic Helige are the same in meaning. So we have, too, in Lower
-Halstow the Saxon helige stow—the holy place. In a list of Jack Cade’s
-Kentish followers, in 1450, the parish of Omi Scor is mentioned, which
-puzzled me for a moment until I saw it was a contraction for Omnium
-Sanctorum, All Saints’.
-
-
-The two Minsters, one in Thanet and one in Sheppey, both of Saxon
-foundation, are the Latin Monasterium, found later as Moynstre and then
-as Menstre. Monkton, earlier Moncstun and Monkynton, marks a manor given
-A.D. 961 by Queen Eadgiva to the monks of the community of Holy Trinity,
-which afterwards became the greater Christ Church, Canterbury. There are
-also, for the same reasons, Monks Horton and Monks Hill, by Herne Hill,
-in Blean. Bishopsbourne, earlier Bishopstone, and Bishopsdenne, denotes
-an episcopal manor. The old nucleus of Lydd was Bishopswic, and in
-Domesday Boughton Malherbe appears as Boltone Archiepiscopi. Preston,
-near Wingham (there is another by Aylesford, and a third near Faversham)
-is Priest’s Town, and denotes a place where there was a small college of
-clergy. That near Wingham is recorded in Domesday as Prestetune, and in
-a fine of Edward II. we have: “Preston next Wengham and Wykham
-Brewouse.” It belonged to S. Augustine’s Abbey at Canterbury. S.
-Nicholas at Wade is named from the dedication of the ancient church. At
-Wade represents the Latin Ad Vadum, at the ford, over the Wantsum, into
-Thanet, near the existing-bridge at Sarre.
-
-
-S. Margaret’s Bay and S. Margaret’s at Cliffe retain their Norman
-dedications. The church originally belonged to S. Martin’s Priory at
-Dover. Lillechurch House, near Higham, marks the site of the old Priory
-of Higham. The Hundred of Lesnes (A.S. leswes, pastures) is the district
-once attached to the Augustinian Abbey (whence the present name of Abbey
-Wood) founded in 1178 by the Chief Justice and Regent Richard de Lucy.
-
-
-Of the five parishes named from the river Cray two are named from the
-patron saints of their churches. S. Mary Cray is, however, called
-Sentlynge in Domesday Book. S. Paul’s Cray is a misnomer, since the
-dedication is to S. Paulinus, Bishop of Rochester, and afterwards
-Archbishop of York. So in a deed of 1291 I find it as Creypaulin, and in
-a fine of Edward II., 1314, as Paulynescraye. In 1560, however, it
-appears as Powle’s Crey.
-
-
-Brenzett, in Romney Marsh, does not suggest in its present form either a
-Celtic or a Saxon origin; but as its old church was dedicated to S.
-Eanswith, a popular Saxon Saint, also commemorated in the S. Mary and S.
-Eanswith of the original church at Folkestone, it has been suggested
-that Brenzett has been evolved in process of time out of Eanswith.
-Bresett and Brynsete (1416) are variants of the place-name. There is
-also the parish of S. Mary in the Marsh hard by. Newchurch, also in the
-Marsh, is Neucerce in Domesday (1036), but as there is no Norman work in
-the church, which is of Early English architecture, it is supposed that
-shortly before Domesday an older church had been pulled down. Then and
-still it gives its name to the Hundred of Newchurch in the Lathe of
-Limea or Limowart, which was re-named Shepway in the time of Henry the
-Third. Also in the Marsh is Dymchurch, earlier Demchurche. But earlier
-still it is said to have been called simply Dimhus or Dimhof, which
-would mean in Saxon the dark or hiding place; so that “church” may be a
-later addition to an old name. Eastchurch, in Sheppey, was, and is, the
-easternmost church in the island.
-
-
-
-
- Place-Names from Persons.
-
-
-We have seen how common in Kent are place-names derived from patronymics
-of the name of a family or clan, such as Kennington, the settlement of
-the Cennings, but there are others, mainly more modern, which include
-the name of an individual, who usually would be the lord of the manor.
-Thus some have imagined that Swingfield, near Dover, is Sweyn’s Field,
-as if the Saxons would have named a place after their piratical enemy.
-The older forms, Swonesfelde and Swynefelde, would more naturally point
-to swine, the keeping of which was the chief pastoral pursuit of the
-Saxons in the dens and clearings of the forest. Queenborough, or
-Quinborowe, however (earlier known as Bynnee), was named by Edward the
-Third (who built a strong fort there) in honour of Queen Philippa in
-1368. Rosherville is very recent, being named after Jeremiah Rosher,
-lord of the manor in the nineteenth century. Sutton Valence was Town
-Sutton until 1265, when it became part of the possessions of William de
-Valence, half-brother of Henry the Third.
-
-
-Boughton Aluph—Bocton Anulphi in a charter of Edward the Second—was the
-seat in the time of Henry the Seventh of the family of Aloff, to which
-Wye belonged. Boughton Monchelsea (Bocton Chanesy in the time of Edward
-the Second) owes its additional name to a Norman noble; and Boughton
-Malherbe (another Bush-ton, or town in the woods) was given as a manor
-to the Norman family of Malherbe. Bethersden can be traced back to
-Norman times as Beatrichesdenne, probably as held by an heiress of that
-name. So Patrixbourne appears earliest as Bourne until a Patrick held
-the manor. Capel le Ferne, near Dover, was originally Mauregge; but in
-1175 the Capel family owned Capel’s Court in Ivychurch, and had estates
-in several parts of Kent. In the fifteenth century it was called
-sometimes S. Mary Marige and sometimes Capelle le farne, and in a deed
-of 1511 it appears as “Capelferne or S. Mary Merge.”
-
-
-Shepherdswell, near Dover, has nothing to do with a shepherd or a well;
-but is an early corruption of Sibertswalt, as it appears in Domesday,
-_i.e._, the wood of Sibert. The phonetic changes are found in later
-charters and wills, Sybersysweld in 1474, Sybberdiswold 1484,
-Shipriswold 1501, Shepswold 1506, and Sheperterswold in 1522. Suabert,
-or Sieberht, was a great Saxon thane, and granted land in Sturgeth
-(Sturry) and Bodesham to St. Domneva’s new Minster in Thanet, while in a
-charter of 814 we read of Selebertineg-lond. Great Chart was originally
-Selebert’s Chart. Sibbertston (or Selebertston) was a sub-manor in
-Chilham, and there is still the Hundred of Sebrittenden or Selebertsden
-in what was the old Lathe of Wye.
-
-
-Mongeham is probably Monyn’s Home, for the Monins family have been there
-or near there since the time of Henry the Third, and are there still.
-Goodneston, commonly called Guston, was no doubt Godwinston, as in the
-territory of the great Earl Godwin, and we trace its present name
-through the earlier forms Gounceston, Goceston, Gusseton, to Guston.
-Another Goodnestone, near Faversham, appears as Gudewynston in 1469 and
-Goodwinston in 1529. The Breux, of Wickham Breux, is another Norman
-addition to a Saxon name.
-
-
-Ebbsfleet, the so important landing place, first of Hengist and then of
-S. Augustine, has, of course, been explained by ignorant guessers as the
-place where the sea ebbs! But its earliest name to be traced is Ypwine’s
-fliot, _i.e._, the creek where some Jute of that name settled. Yp is
-probably the Eop in Eoppa, which is a common Saxon name, also found as
-Eobba, so that Eobbe’s fleet easily becomes Ebbsfleet. Upper Hardres may
-take us to the Norman family which came from Ardres in Picardy, although
-it is possible to find a common Celtic origin for the name both of the
-French and the English village in the Celtic Ardd, that is, ploughland.
-It is Heg Hardres, _i.e._, High Hardies, in early documents.
-
-
-Horton Kirby was simply Horton until the reign of Edward III., when a
-Lancashire Kirby married the heiress of the manor and rebuilt the
-castle. Even in 1377 I find it still called Hortune only. Offham is
-Offa’s home, and several places, including probably Otham, bear his
-name. Here this Christian King of Mercia is said to have conquered
-Edmund of Kent. So Old Romney was earlier Offeton, Effeton, or Affeton.
-Offa ruled Sussex and Kent, and so we have Offham near Lewes, Offington
-near Worthing, Offham near Arundel, and Ufton near Tunstall. But the
-name of Offeton for Old Romney disappears after 1281. Foot’s Cray, and
-Footbury Hill near there, is named from Godwin Fot the Saxon. Chelsfield
-is said to record the name of a Saxon Ceol, a shortened form of
-Ceolmund, or Ceolbald, or Ceolwulf, all of which were common names.
-Scotney Castle, Lamberhurst, belonged in the 12th century to the Barons
-de Scoterni, who came from Pontigny, in N. France. They had also Scotney
-Court, at Lydd.
-
-
-One may add to these samples of places named from persons, two or three
-that very probably take us back to mythical personages. Woodnesborough
-(Wodenesbergh 1465, Wynsbergh 1496), was named by the Jutish conquerors
-after their god Woden, whom they commemorated among the Teutonic names
-they bequeathed to our names of the week. There is another
-Woodnesborough in Wilts, and Wednesbury and Wednesfield in
-Staffordshire. And we note that the next parish is Eastry. For the name
-of this very old and important place in Saxon time various derivations
-have been proposed, but it is more than possible that it is the town of
-Eástor or Eostre, the goddess of Spring, whose name survived when the
-conversion of the heathen Saxons gave a new light to the festival in the
-Spring, which henceforth was to celebrate a greater Resurrection than
-that merely of the flowers. And possibly a third instance may be found
-in the name of Aylesford, which is Egelesford in the _Saxon Chronicle_,
-and Elesford in Domesday. Amongst various possible derivations that of
-Eigil, the Teutonic hero-archer or demigod, is worthy of consideration,
-since it is found as naming places elsewhere; for example, Aylesbury, in
-Buckinghamshire, which in the _Saxon Chronicle_ appears as Ægelesburh.
-
-
-
-
- Absurdities in Derivation.
-
-
-When a language is not pure, but the result of the intermingling and
-interaction of several tongues as distinct as Celtic, Saxon and Norman;
-and when, by the wear and tear of daily use through centuries,
-place-names have altered in detail of spelling and pronunciation; and
-when for a long time spelling and reading were arts known but to a small
-minority of the population, it is plainly inevitable that the original
-form and real meaning of a place-name should often be difficult to
-trace. But always in an enquiring mind there was the insistent WHY?
-which is a characteristic and a glory of man as a reasoning animal, and
-hence often a meaning was given to a word that is simply a sort of pun,
-an endeavour to explain a word by what it looks like in current speech
-or dialect when there was not the knowledge of earlier times and older
-tongues which elevates mere guessing into the science of etymology.
-
-Some Kentish examples of this source of error may be useful. Thus, when
-we trace Maidstone back into the earliest records we find that it has
-nothing to do with either Maid or Stone, but comes through many
-variations from the Celto-Saxon Medwegston, or town on the Medway. Yet
-though Lambard knew and quoted this in 1570 he suggested also a meaning
-of “mighty stone, a name given for the quarry of hard stone there!” So,
-too, Hasted thinks Loose is so called because the stream loses itself
-underground (like the Mole in Surrey) for some eight hundred yards at
-Brishing! He might as well have ascribed the name to Loose and Detling
-having been long only Chapelries of Maidstone, but at last having been
-cut loose and made into separate parishes in Elizabethan times!
-
-Tenterden is named, says an old Kentish writer, as “some vulgar fancies
-conjecture, from the tenderness of its soil”; Feversham, says another
-old Kentish writer, Phillipott, useful as an historian, useless to
-etymologists, “is an unhealthy town, and carries the tokens of it in its
-name.” _Id. est._, the home of fevers! Harbledown, says Black, is
-so-called “in allusion to its grassy downs and hills,” as if grassiness
-were not a characteristic of any and every down and hill in Kent.
-Gadshill, we are solemnly told, is named from “gads,” clubs used by
-footpads who were not unknown there (or anywhere else) on Watling
-Street. We should smile less if the name was Padshill.
-
-And one of the most ancient, and indeed prehistoric, names in Kent is
-Penypot, a hill opposite Chilham. “Here once,” one old rustic would say,
-“they dug up a pot full of pennies.” “Nay,” another would respond, “it
-was where they used to sell ale for a penny a pot in the good old days!”
-To such vile meanings may descend the venerable Celtic Pen y wlh—the
-Head of the Mound.
-
-One of the earliest Roman geographers heard of Thanet under its earliest
-name of Tanet, and because he knew a Greek word Thanatos, which means
-death, he so interpreted Thanet. On this absurdity he based a baseless
-legend which Lambarde in 1570 thus describes: “There be no snakes in
-Tanet (saith he), and the earth that is brought from thence will kill
-them.” (Why death to snakes any more than to sheep or shepherds? Why not
-go further and make Thanatos a lifeless place like the Dead Sea?) “But
-whether he wrote this of any sure understanding that he had of the
-quality of the soil, or only by conjecture at the woord Thanatos, which
-in Greeke signifieth death, I wote not.” This is as strong an example of
-conjectural derivation, with nothing but a superficial resemblance to
-support it, as we could find. But Lambarde himself, great as he is in
-many ways, gives derivations almost as baseless, _e.g._, Blackheath,
-“called of the colour of the soil!” Wrotham, “given for the great
-plentie of woorts or good hearbs that growe there.” Farley, “interpreted
-the place of the Boares, or Bulles” (which? and why?). Sittingbourne,
-“one interprets it Seethingbourne, Rivus Fervens aut Hulliens” (_i.e._,
-the boiling or bubbling river—in that flat country!). This is too much
-even for him and his times, and so he adds, “but how likely let others
-see.”
-
-
-
-
- Our “Tons” and “Stones.”
-
-
-As given in _Kelly’s Kent Directory_, our Tons and Stones are:
-Addington, Aldington, Allington, Barfreston, Bedmonton, Bilsington,
-Birchington, Blackmanstone, Bonnington (two), Bossington, Boughton
-(four), Brompton, Charlton (two), Cheriton, Chiddingstone, Chilmington,
-Chilton, Cliftonville, Cossington, Cozenton, Crofton, Culverstone,
-Cuxton, Davington, Denton (two), Doddington, Dumpton, Dunton Green,
-Eddington, Ellington, Egerton, Eggerton, Elmstone, Elvington,
-Folkestone, Foston Green, Funton, Garrington, Goldstone, Goodnestone
-(two), Guston, Hackington, Hampton (two), Hamptons, Holmstone Camp,
-Horton (two), Horton Kirby, Hunton, Kenardington, Kennington, Keston,
-Kingston or Kingstone, Kippington, Knowlton, Langton Green, Linton,
-Littlestone, Liverton Street, Loddington, Lullingstone, Lowton, Luton,
-Maidstone, Manston, Milton (two), Milton Regis, Milton Street, Monks
-Horton, Monkton, Murston, Nackington, Newington (three), Nonington,
-Horton, Orlestone, Orpington, Pevington, Plumpton, Poulton, Preston
-(two), Ripton, Salmestone, Scuddington, Seaton, Sevington, Sibton, Stone
-(four), Stonebridge (two), Stonebridge Green, Stone Cross (three), Stone
-Crouch, Stone Hill, Stone House, Stone Stairs, Stone Street, Stonehill
-(two), Sutton (three), Swanton Street, Tankerton, Teston, Thanington,
-Tilmanstone, Tottington, Twitton, Ufton, Upton, Wanstone, Weddington,
-Wierton Street, Wilderton, Willington Street, Wilmington, Wootton
-(three)—147 in all. One may add, for purposes of investigation, Stone,
-an old borough in Maidstone.
-
-First, one must endeavour to separate the tons and the stones—the Saxon
-settlements or towns and the places named from stones set for boundaries
-or for marks where manor courts or motes were held. And this is not
-always easy, since mediæval spelling was vague, and in some cases an
-original “stone” has become “ton” in later years, or _vice versa_.
-Generally, a reference to the earliest forms (where such can be found in
-Saxon or Norman, or even Early English documents) will settle the point.
-Thus Folkestone is by some identified with the site of the “stone of
-inscription on the Gallic sea,” mentioned by Nennius, the Saxon
-geographer. It is Folcesstane in the _Saxon Chronicle_, and Falchestan
-in Domesday, and therefore no explanation involving ton need be
-entertained. Keston, again, is Cystaninga, hence in Saxon charters
-between 862 and 966, as being or having a boundary mark stone. It is
-Chestan in Domesday. But Chiddingstone should probably lose its final e
-and derive from a Saxon patronymic, although a modern and grotesque
-suggestion is that the dolmen there was used as a Chiding or judgment
-stone by Celtic or Saxon priests. Maidstone, again, should probably be
-Maidston, being Medwegston in the _Saxon Chronicle_, and almost
-certainly meaning the town on the Medway; although it is fair to say
-that an ending in stane is early found. Tilmanstone was earlier
-Telmeston, and Elmstone was Elmerston, and the earlier spellings of
-Goodnestone are Goodwinston, Gudewynston, and Goodneston.
-
-Stones are much fewer than “tons,” although no doubt the number of such
-marks (origin of our milestones) was increased by the Romans. Thus the
-place Stone, two miles west of Faversham and on their great main road
-Watling Street, is thought to mark the site of their military station of
-Durolevo, and thus to be named from the distance mark. We must also note
-that stone bridges were practically unknown to the Saxons, except those
-the Romans had left, and Stone Cross would not appear as a place-name
-until after their conversion, while a stone house, except as the castle
-of a Norman noble, would be of quite late date.
-
-As to the Tons, some are named from geographical position, such as
-Norton (Northtown), near Faversham, and the Suttons (South-town), on the
-edge of the Weald or south of Dartford; and, whatever may be the case
-with others, the Milton near Sittingbourne is called Middeltuna in the
-_Saxon Chronicle_ and in Domesday, since it was reckoned the central
-town of Kent when Watling Street was far the greatest and most
-frequented route to be considered, being 42 miles from London and 31
-from Dover. Our various Boughtons are “settlements in the wood,” as are
-also the Woottons. Monkton and the Prestons were settlements of monks
-and of colleges of priests.
-
-The great majority, however, denote the settlement of some Saxon (_i.e._
-Jutish) family, such as Seafings or Sevingas at Sevington, the Ælings at
-Allington, the Noningas at Nonington, the Cennings at Kennington, and so
-forth. We find this Saxon patronymic “ing” in 37 of our Kentish place
-names ending in ton, and when we add the ings like Barming (Bamling,
-Barmelinge, and Berblinge in Early English documents), Beltring,
-Bilting, Birling, Bobbing (Bobing-seata in a Saxon charter of
-798—compare Bobbingsworth in Essex), Bramling. Bazing (at the junction
-of Kent, Sussex and Surrey), reminds us of Basing and Basingstoke in
-Hants and Basingham (in Domesday Book) in Sussex. Charing, Chevening
-(although this may be earlier and Celtic), Cooling, Detling, perhaps
-Drelingore, Eastling, Etching, Garlinge, Geddinge, Hacklinge, Hailing,
-Hawkinge, Hucking, Kemsing, Lidsing (not Lyminge, however), Mailing,
-Nullinge, Ospringe, Ottinge, Pedlinge, Postling, Ratling, Rawling,
-Reading Street (three), Rowling, Ruckinge, Sandling (two), Selling,
-Sellinge, Shelving, Spratling Street, Stelling, Stowting, Weavering
-Street, Welling, Witchling, and Yalding; and when to these we add the
-“inghams” I have given in a previous article, we might alter Tennyson’s
-“Saxon, and Norman, and Dane are we,” into “Mostly Saxon are we as to
-our place-names in Kent.” Our two Charltons are of old Ceorletone—the
-town of the ceorls or husbandmen. Some “tons” come from personal names
-also, _e.g._, Cuxton (compare Cuckfield in Sussex), Cuca and its
-diminutive Cucola are found as Anglo-Saxon names, and as Cockstane the
-place appears in Domesday, and as Cokelstone in 1472, nearly 400 years
-later, with other forms Cockston, Coklestane, Cukelestane, Cookstone,
-etc. (all pointing to stone, and not ton, being properly the final
-syllable).
-
-There is, however, obviously much to be done before we can know—or even
-in some cases guess—as to the origin of some “tons” or “stones.”
-
-
- Our “Hams.”
-
-In considering the three score and ten, or more, place-names in Kent
-which end in _ham_, we are met with the initial difficulty that there
-are two Saxon words Ham—home, and Hamm—land drained by dykes, an East
-Friesian word, though the far more common Ham is the Teutonic heim,
-familiar as a suffix in Germany, which in Picardy becomes hen, and in
-Friesland um. Either ton or ham as a suffix after _ing_ denotes where a
-Saxon family or clan had settled and made its toun or heim. Thus the
-Pæfings made a Pevington in Kent and a Pavingham in Bedfordshire, and
-the Aldings an Aldington in Kent and Worcester, and an Aldingham in
-Lancashire, the Leasings a Lossingham in Kent and a Lissington in
-Lancashire. Such instances do not uphold what some have held—that there
-were two words spelled the same, the one meaning home and the other an
-enclosure.
-
-As to the Hamm or Haam for marshy ground, it would seem to be found in
-Kent as accounting for Ham Ponds, near Sandwich, marshy ground dear to
-botanists, and Mersham (A.S. Mersc—marsh) in Romney, and Merston
-(Merxton in 74), near Rochester. Ham Green and Ham Street are also
-Romney Marsh names. Waterham and Wetham would suggest the same origin,
-the latter being in the Rainham marshes and the former, I think, not far
-from the Faversham marshes. Dagenham also (as elsewhere) is Decca’s
-marsh land. But the ordinary hams, as we may call them, have again to be
-subdivided into those which indicate the settlement of a Saxon family;
-those which enshrine a personal name; and those which relate to the
-environment or situation of the home.
-
-In the first division would came the cases in which ham followed the
-patronymic ing, denoting “the sons of.” Thus Gillingham (Gelingham in
-Domesday) was the settlement of the Gillings, who are also found at
-Gilling in Yorkshire, Gillingham in Norfolk, and Gillingham in Dorset.
-The home of the Mottings was at Mottingham, and that of the Leasings at
-Lossenham. Our Chilham would not at first sight seem to come in here;
-but in a charter of King Wihdraed in 699 it is called “Cilling,” and in
-another of 814 “the port which is called Cillincg” (the Stour was then
-navigable up to here for small craft), and a manor in Chilham is
-Shillingfield, so that a connection with the Gillings may be suggested.
-Farningham might seem _prima facie_ to add another to this unexpectedly
-small class; but there is no known tribe of Farnings, and the old name
-was Fremyngham (again with no tribe name to support it). It has been
-suggested that it derives from the A.S. Frem or foreign, and denotes a
-settlement of foreigners (possibly Danes) coming from the Thames up the
-Darenth valley.
-
-In the second division we might place any hams recording the personal
-names of those who founded them. Here Isaac Taylor may err in saying:
-“In the Anglo-Saxon charters we frequently find this suffix united with
-the names of families—never with those of individuals.” In this he
-follows Leo in his _Anglo Saxon Names_. And yet on another page (compare
-p. 331 with p. 131) he gives a list of places derived from the names of
-individuals. But certainly Godmersham and Rodmersham suggest personal
-names, and no one has ascribed any other origin to Harrietsham, which,
-even down to the fifteenth century, appears as Heryotesham. In one
-probably illiterate will of 1594 it is called “Henry Etisham alias
-Harrysam,” the latter being no doubt the vernacular pronunciation. So
-surely Meopham is Mepa’s Home. No letter o appeared in the name before
-or during the 14th century, when Simon de Mepham was Archbishop of
-Canterbury. It is a modern intrusion, left unpronounced. Icelham,
-McClure gives as meaning the Home of Icel, like Icelsham in Sussex, thus
-contravening the dictum of Taylor and Leo as to personal names. So
-Offham, and probably Otham, is said by the learned _Sussex Place-Names_
-to be named after King Offa, who had such power and made such great
-benefactions to the Church in Sussex and Kent. Finglesham, called
-Flenguessa in Domesday and Fengesham in 1206, suggests a person rather
-than a family when the common ing is not then found in the name, and so
-does Wittersham, especially in its old forms of Westricheshamme and
-Witrychesham. Faversham was Febres-ham in 811 (Charters and Rolls), and
-Febresham in 858. In Domesday (1086) it appears as Faversham, and as to
-this McClure, a great recent authority in Saxon, says: “The first
-element is a personal name in the genitive.” As, however, there seems to
-be no similar Saxon designation, he suggests a possible survival of the
-Latin Faber, _i.e._, Smith, in a thoroughly Latinized part of Kent. But
-this pre-supposes that the place was named from a single unnamed
-operative. Betsham is obscure, but when we find, also in Kent, Betshurst
-and Betteshanger, a personal origin seems likely. As McClure says, our
-Luddesdown seems to involve a personal name; he might say the same of
-Luddenham.
-
-The third division introduces us to settlements or homes named from
-their environment or situation. Thus Higham (Heahhaam in a charter of
-770, and Hehham in one of 774), is plainly from the A.S. Heah, whence
-our High; and so is Hougham (earlier Hugham), near Dover. Burham is the
-fortified place or Burh, found in 1498 as Borowham, in 1511 as
-Borougham, and in 1549 in its present form. Homes between Rochester and
-Aylesford had to be strong in the days and the place of constant
-maraudings and wars. Mersham is the Mersc home in Romney Marsh.
-Westerham, of old Ostreham (compare Westenhanger alias Ostringhanger) is
-the little white “home in the west” of Kent. Ickham—Ioccham in a charter
-of 785, in Andrededa—otherwise Yeckham, is probably the settlement on
-the yoke of arable land, from the Saxon measure Yeok. Chartham (Certeham
-in Domesday) is the home in the forest, chart and hart being varying
-forms of the Teutonic word for forest, the former more common in
-England, the latter in Germany. Perhamsted, says McClure, is the
-homestead where pears were cultivated. Thornham (though Turnham in
-Domesday) is said to derive from Hawthorns, Thynne being Saxon for
-thorn, and haegathorn later for hedge-thorn—whence also probably our
-Kentish Eythorne (anciently Hegythe Thorne), and Eyhorne (Haythorne in
-Plea of Henry III.), as place-names. Weald, Wold, Wald, and Wood (A.S.,
-Wudu and Weald), all mean woods, so that we can understand our Wouldham
-and Waltham. Lenham must be the settlement of the Len, unless it could
-be proved that the river ever had another name, Celtic as it probably
-is.
-
-The following is a full list of the “Hams” in Kent according to _Kelly’s
-Directory of Kent_, and I have extracted them in the hope that it may
-save some trouble to a future writer on our place-names. I am not of the
-class of those who say: “Posterity has done nothing for me, so why
-should I do anything for posterity?”
-
-Adisham, Alkham, Barham, Bagham, Beckenham, Burham, Bentham, Betsham,
-Bayham, Cudham, Cobham, Clapham, Chatham, Chartham, Chilham, Crowdleham,
-Crockham, Dagenham, Eltham, Elham, Fawkham, Faversham, Farningham,
-Finglesham, Frogham, Godmersham, Gillingham, Ham ponds, Ham Green (two),
-Ham Hill, Ham Street, Heverham, Ham, Harrietsham, Hougham, Higham,
-Horsham, Ickham, Ightham, Lenham, Luddenham, Lossenham, Meopham,
-Mersham, Mongeham, Mottingham, Newnham, Offham, Otham, Otterham, Petham,
-Peckham, Rayham, Rainham, Rodmersham, Sydenham, Shoreham, Teynham,
-Thornham, Waltham, Waterham, Wetham, Wickham, Wickhambreux, Westerham,
-Wrotham, Wingham, Wittersham, Wouldham, Yaldham. Kilburne wrote that
-there were 49, but here I enumerate 71, and one might add Perhamsted,
-Iselham, Freckenham, Mistelham, and the Hundreds of Kinghamford and
-Downhamford, making 77, all of undoubtedly Saxon origin.
-
-
- Our “Soles,” “Burys,” and “Hithes.”
-
-The word Sole occurs frequently as a Kentish place-name, and is purely
-Saxon. Dr. Bosworth’s _Anglo-Saxon Dictionary_ gives Sol as meaning
-“soil—dirt—a wallowing place”; while Lewis defines it as “a dirty pond
-of standing water.” The Saxon verb is Sylian, “to soil or cover with
-mud.” So an old Kentish will has the words “beside the wateringe sole in
-trend (_i.e._, the end) of Yckhame streete.” Now, as the chief
-industries of the Saxons in Kent were pigs and pots—as now they are
-bricks and beer—it is obvious that pigs, especially in clay soil, would
-create many wallowing places. So we find Sole Street, near Broadstairs
-(now corrupted into Sorvell and so made unmeaning and unintelligible),
-another by Cobham, another by Crundale, and another by Selling. We find
-also Bradsole (S. Radigund’s near Dover), Buttsole in Eastry, Blacksole
-at Wrotham, Maidensole, Longsole Heath by Allington, Thewsole, and
-Hangmansole in Romney Marsh, Eastsole, Newsole near Coldred, Esole near
-Nonington, Podsole near Headcorn, a Mote-sole Street in Sandwich,
-Mudshole by Hawkinge, Barnsole Lane, Gillingham, Capel Sole, Barnsole in
-Staple, Westfield Sole in Boxley, Rigsol Road in Otterden, and last, but
-not least, Paddisole, or Padsole, at Maidstone.
-
-
- Our “Burys.”
-
-There are two Anglo-Saxon words which have to be distinguished—Beorh,
-like the German Berg, meaning a hill; and Buruh or Byrig, which comes
-later into the suffix Bury, which again later comes to be used for a
-division of Hundred or simply for a town. In the south of England we
-have most of the distinctively Saxon or Jutish Bury, while in the north
-we have the Anglian and Norse forms of Burgh, Brough, Borough, more
-common. And one must add, as a variant of the same word, Barrow, which
-in modern use we confine to a tumulus for the sepulture of a great
-warrior or leader. As these British camps were generally on high ground
-for observation and for defence, the ideas represented by Beorh and by
-Buruh would inevitably intertwine. The British and Saxon camps were no
-doubt numerous when we consider the centuries of marauders and invaders
-which kept our earliest forefathers in a constant fear. They were
-usually round or oblong, whereas the fewer and later camps or forts of
-the Romans were rectangular. Surrounded by a deep ditch, the earth of
-which was thrown up to make a wall, into them in troublous times were
-collected families and flocks, so that the transition of meaning from
-the Byrig or fort to the Borough or town was easy. Canterbury, for
-example, began as Cantwara-byrig, the fort of the folk of Kent, long
-before it developed into its most important borough or city. So, in
-another county, Glæstingaberig became Glastonbury.
-
-In Kent we find Farnborough, Frindsbury, Wateringbury, Hildenborough,
-Pembury, Cobhambury, Southborough, Oldbury, Bigbury, Glassenbury, two
-Hawkenburies, Holborough, Howbury, Scadbury, Goodbury, Eastbury,
-Fallburie, Stockbury (where the ditch and bank had been supplemented by
-a palisade of stocks, the predecessor of our fathers’ cheveaux de frise
-in warlike defence), Binbury, Westborough (in Maidstone above and
-defending the Medway), Woodnesbury, Willesborough, Queenborough,
-Richborough, Bidborough, Marshborough, Statenborough, Tattlebury,
-Downbury, Hockenbury, Dunbury and Tatlingbury—a long list which
-predicates long years, or rather centuries, of fighting in defence, as
-much as my previous list of forestal names proves how much of Kent was
-covered with woods.
-
-Some of these, like Oldbury and Bigbury, are undoubtedly old British
-camps or forts; others were adapted, or newly made, by Romans and,
-later, by Saxons, while again later still a Norman castle might be
-reared on the old strategic spot, as in the case of Thornham Castle,
-near me. Flinders Petrie, however, says that “many sites which by their
-name of bury suggest a camp or fort are now bare of remains.” So he
-writes after examining Downbury Farm, near Pembury, Hockenbury, and
-Dunbury, near Staplehurst, Tattlebury near Headcorn, Tatlingbury near
-Capel, Perry Hill near Cooling, Pembury, Frindsbury and Wateringbury.
-
-Our Barrows in Kent are mainly small, graves rather than mounds, but we
-have the place-names Barrow Green, Barrow Hill near Ashford, and Barrow
-Hill by Sellindge.
-
-
- Our “Hithes.”
-
-Hithe is the Saxon for haven, or place where ships could lie, and Hythe
-(Heda in Domesday Book, and Hee in a deed of 1229) was near the edge of
-the sea when history begins; but West Hythe, which is now three miles
-from the sea, was the old port used by the Romans and by them called
-Limene, the harbour. Hence our modern Lympne—Portus Lemanis, in which
-the p is a modern addition. I find it Limene in 1291, Lymen in 1396,
-Limne in 1475, and Lymne in 1480.
-
-Then, right in the Weald, is the hamlet of Smallhythe, three miles south
-of Tenterden. Down to 1509, however, there was a channel from the sea up
-to here.
-
-Newheth, or New Hythe, is a hamlet of East Malling—and it was a sort of
-port (or perhaps a wharf) on the Medway for shipping goods from South
-Kent and the Weald.
-
-On the Thames, below Dartford, is Greenhithe, which has kept both its
-name and the justification thereof from the times of the Saxons to the
-present day. There the Danish King had an entrenched camp as a winter
-station for his soldiers. Here William the Conqueror was stopped by the
-men of Kent until he confirmed them in their old Saxon laws and
-privileges. From here Sir John Franklin and Captain Crozier sailed in
-the Erebus and Terror (in the year and month of my birth) on their last
-and fatal voyage to the Pole. Here still the hithe discharges its lime
-and chalk, and has an environment and background of green fields and
-woods.
-
-Ærrehythe, “the old haven,” known to us as Erith, the landing place for
-what was from 1178, when it was founded, the important Abbey of Lesnes,
-which still gives its name to the Hundred.
-
-
- Our “Cold Harbours.”
-
-Perhaps the most common place-name in England is that of Cold Harbour;
-though Sutton and Norton may run it close. Over one hundred and seventy
-have been enumerated in England, a number which would be brought up to
-over two hundred if we added the Caldecots and the Calcotts (we have a
-Calcott in Sturry parish) which are names with the same meaning. And yet
-in a sense Cold Harbour is not a place-name, for the only parish of that
-name was not formed and named until 1842. It is near Dorking. However,
-as a name of a manor or a farm it is common. Thus in London (where we
-should hardly expect Cold Harbours of the kind found in country places)
-there was the Manor of Coldherberghe, of which we know much since 1327.
-Situated on the bank of the Thames near London Bridge, its mansion was
-tenanted by royal dukes, a bishop, a Lord Mayor, and afterwards became
-the Hall of the Watermen’s Company, and at last the City of London
-Brewery. The other is in Camberwell, which was one great manor at the
-time of the Conquest, but later divided into minor lordships, to two of
-which the name of Cold Harbour was given, of which one was Cold
-Herbergh, Hachesham (Hatcham now), while the other survives in the well
-known Cold Harbour Lane, in Camberwell. In early 19th century maps Cold
-Blow Farm was the representative of the old manor (Kent has a Cold Blow
-in Bexley). A curious 15th century corruption was Coldabbeye, though
-there was never an abbey there. The farm succumbed to suburban expansion
-in the 19th century; but Harbour Road, Cold Harbour Lane, and Cold
-Harbour Place, tell us of its site.
-
-The Cold Harbours in Kent are thirty in number, while ten are found in
-each of the contiguous counties of Surrey and Sussex. They are found at
-Addington, Aldington, Aylesford, Barham Downs, Bishopsbourne, Bridge,
-Chislehurst, Deptford, Ditton, Eltham, Higham, Hildenborough, Eltham,
-Lamberhurst, Lymne, Maidstone, Newington, Northfleet, Penshurst,
-Sellinge, Sittingbourne, Stoke-in-Hoo, Sutton-at-Hone, Tenterden,
-Trench, Tunbridge, Woodnesborough, Woolwich, Wrotham, and Wye. The
-majority of these are upon or near Roman sites, or on the Roman main
-roads, a fact to be borne in mind when we come to consider their origin.
-For Isaac Taylor says of early travelling: “Where no religious house
-existed to receive the traveller he would usually be compelled to
-content himself with the shelter of bare walls. The ruins of deserted
-Roman villas were no doubt so used, and such places seem commonly to
-have borne the name of Cold Harbour. In the neighbourhood of ancient
-roads we find no less than seventy, and about a dozen more bearing the
-analogous name of Caldecot or ‘cold cot.’” His figures have now been
-shown to be very much under the mark. So Forbes and Burmester, in their
-_Our Roman Highways_, say: “The appearance of such names is believed to
-be a sure indication of the use in comparatively modern times of Roman
-buildings for purposes of temporary shelters; and the occasional
-discovery of tessellated pavements injured by fires lighted in the
-corners of rooms suggests their utilization by wayfarers.”
-
-Not that all would have been villas or private residences. The orderly
-and practical Romans on their great military roads had a colonia at each
-15 or 20 miles with a mansio or government posting station, and between
-each, at about five miles distance, was a mutatio with less
-accommodation, and used by a humbler class. The manager of each was
-called a Strator—like our Way Warden. In many cases we find that the
-Cold Harbours come exactly where we should look for the regularly set
-mutatio. The same kind of arrangement is found in the Hans or Khans of
-the East, which provide shelter for traveller and stabling for his horse
-or other beast of burden; but no bed or food. Analogous also are the
-dak-bungalows familiar to us in India.
-
-The name, however, is pure Saxon, like the German Kalt Herberg, and the
-surviving French Auberge for a small place of rest and refreshment. Mr.
-Unthank, a friend and church-worker of mine in Walworth, enlisted my
-interest in the name a dozen years ago, and since he has written
-learnedly on the subject in _Notes and Queries_ (1914) and the _Home
-Counties Magazine_ (1912). He calls them “the leanest shadows of our
-cheerful inns,” and though bare walls and a bit of a roof would be
-better than nothing to a traveller over Barham Downs, yet, compared with
-the “warmest welcome in an inn” experienced elsewhere, he would no doubt
-call it a cold harbour. Later, and in Middle English, the Heribeorg,
-shelter for a host, became as Herberg a synonym for any inn, and later
-still Harbourers or harbingers were the caterers or victuallers, who at
-last gained the right to sell ale in competition with the more normal
-hostelries. Then the trade-name became a surname, and John le Herberger
-appears, and perhaps the Harpers of to-day indicate an innkeeper rather
-than a musician as their ancestor.
-
-Of course, the perverse ingenuity of some has invented strange
-derivations for the name. Stow suggests that they were coal-stations!
-Another writer (who apparently only knew of one Cold Harbour near London
-Bridge) that it was where the Köln or Cologne merchants had their
-headquarters! Another derives from Col (ubris) arbor—the tree or staff
-round which a serpent twines. This is the emblem of Mercury the
-messenger of Jupiter, and may have been therefore the sign of the Roman
-posting-stations!
-
-
- Anderida.
-
-As I have already said, Kent was once mainly either dense primæval
-forest, or marshland, which fringed nearly all its coastal border from
-Sussex to London. The greater part of the forest was that which extended
-along the northern border of the South Saxons with a breadth of thirty
-and a length of one hundred and twenty miles. But the royal forest of
-Blean (in which I was born) is continuous with Anderida, although it
-bears a separate name in a charter of King Offa in 791. This would make
-the forestal land extend from Whitstable through East and Mid Kent,
-Northern Sussex, Southern Surrey, and Eastern Hampshire, right down to
-Petersfield. Distinct, but contiguous, was the Cestmwarowalth or
-Cestersetta Wald, of which part remains in the woods between Rochester
-and Maidstone, although some would place it near Lyminge.
-
-This primæval forest is still marked by a great survival of woodland and
-parks, as a coloured map of Kent would show, and also by the abundance
-of the characteristic terminations of burst, den, ley, holt, and feld.
-It names the Weald (Teutonic Wad—wood), although therein more cleared
-than anywhere else, and the less known Roman road, Well Street, which
-ran through it from Maidstone, should be probably the Wald road.
-
-Generally called Anderida from the name the Romans gave to their fort
-and garrisoned place near Pevensey, this is only a change from the
-earlier Andred. Coed-Andred was its Celtic name, from Coed, a wood,
-which word appears also in Ked Coed (the hollow dolman in the wood),
-which was corrupted into Kits Coty House; while the Cotswolds give the
-Saxon addition to the Celtic name, so that the meaning is Wood-wood,
-just as Durbeck or the Ravensbourne mean Water-water by the Saxon
-surnaming of a Celtic name. In early Saxon charters, which are written
-in Latin, it appears as Saltus-Andred, Silva-Andred, Saltus communis, or
-Silva regalis, while in Saxon it is Andred, Andredsleage, or
-Andredsweald.
-
-As to the meaning of the name, Edwards thinks it a proper name, which is
-very improbable considering its extent. Lambarde says Andred in the
-Celtic means great, which is simplest and best, provided that such a
-word is proved to exist. Dr. Guest refers it, less probably, to a Celtic
-negative an and dred, a dwelling, and Lewin to “an” for the “deni,” for
-oak-forest, and by a “dhu” for black.
-
-It may be here interesting to give a list of the names borne nearly a
-thousand years ago by some towns and villages in Kent, especially those
-in the Weald. In a map in Furley’s _Weald_, he gives the manors and
-places mentioned in the Domesday Book (A.D. 1086), and by this it
-appears that settlements and cultivation were nearly all on the north
-and east edges of the great forest of Anderida. The only exceptions are
-Tivedale (now Tudely), Benindene (Benenden), Tepindene (Tiffenden), and
-Belicedene, which are deeper in the forest.
-
-Taking the line of the Kentish Weald from west to east, we find fringing
-the primæval wood, Distreham (Westerham), Briestede (Brasted), Sondresse
-(Sundridge), Brotenham (Wrotham), Nargourde (Mereworth), Pecheham (W.
-Peckham), Pecheham (East Peckham), Otringebury (Wateringbury), Nedstede
-(Nettlestead), Hallinges (Yalding), Meddestane (Maidstone), Boltone
-Monchensei (Boughton Monchelsea), Certh (Chart Sutton), Suttone (Sutton
-Valence), Sudtone (East Sutton), Olecumbe (Ulcombe), Boltone
-Archiepiscopi (B. Malherbe), Bogelei (Bewley in B. Malherbe), Piventone
-(Pevington), Pluckelei (Pluckley), Rotinge (Roting in Pluckley),
-Litecert (Little Chart), Certh Mill, Certh (Great Chart), Eshetesford or
-Estefort (Ashford), Merseham (Mersham), Aldingtone (Aldington), Limes
-(Lymne), Boningtone (Bonnington), Bilsvitone (Bilsington), Rochinges
-(Ruckinge), Orleverstone (Orleston), Werahorne (Warehorne), Tintintone
-Dene (Tinton in Warehorne), Apeldres (Appledore), Palestre (Palster in
-Wittersham), Newedene (Newenden).
-
-In the rest of Chenth (Kent) the chief places mentioned in Domesday were
-Bromlei (Bromley), Lolingstone (Lullingstone), Tarenteforte (Dartford),
-Gravesham (Gravesend), Rovescestre (Rochester), Esledes (Leeds), Scapige
-(Sheppey), Favershant (Faversham), Wi (Wye), Goversham (Godmersham),
-Cantuaria (Canterbury), Forewic (Fordwich), Roculf (Reculver), Tanet
-(Thanet), Sandwice (Sandwich), Estrei (Eastry), Addelam (Deal), Douere
-(Dover), Fulchestan (Folkestone), Heda (Hythe), and Romene (Romney).
-
-One thing that strikes one at once is the proof any list of Kentish
-villages gives of the forestal character of Kent. As one of my aims is
-to save trouble on the part of some future writer who shall produce the
-long overdue History of Kentish Place-Names, I will here transcribe all
-which indicate a woodland origin. About a few I am doubtful, but
-probably others which I have in ignorance left out would balance them.
-There are in this list 20 of the characteristic dens, although far more
-survive as the names of manors or now uninhabited parts; there are 15
-hursts and 35 woods—some of the last being no doubt modern as names of
-places. I make 174 of these forestal names as under:—
-
-Abbey Wood, Ackhold (Oakwood), Acol (alias Wood), Acrise? (Oakridge),
-Appledore, Arnold’s Oak, Ash, Ashenden, Ashford, Ashley, Ashurst,
-Bargrove, Bellegrove (Benenden), Betteshanger, Bircholt, Boghurst
-Street, Bough Beech, Boughton (four), Boxhurst (Boxley), Bredhurst,
-Broad Oak, Brogueswood, Broome, Broomfield, High Brooms, Broomstreet,
-Bush, Challock Wood, Chart (four), Chartham, Chartham Hatch, Cheriton,
-Chesnut Street, Cobham Wood, Cowden, Cockham Wood, Colds Wood, Comp
-Woods, Crookhurst Street, Denstead, Denstroud, Denton (three), Denwood,
-Dingleden, East Malling Woods, Eastwood, Eggringe Wood, Elmley, Elmley
-Ferry, Elmstead (two), Elmstone, Eyehorne Hatch, Eyhorne Street,
-Eythorne, Hawkenhurst, Filmer’s Wood, Five Oak Green, Forest Hill, Four
-Elms, Frogholt, Goathurst Common, Gore Wood, Forsley Wood, Goudhurst,
-Grove, Grove End, Grove Ferry, Grove Green, Hatch Green, Hawkhurst,
-Hazelwood Hill, Hengrove, Henhurst, Henwood, Heronden, Hoaden,
-Hockenden, Hollingbourne, Hollanden, Holm Mill, Holmstone, Holt Street,
-Holwood Hill, Hookstead Green (Oakstead?), Horsmonden, Hurst, Ivy Hatch
-(Ileden), Kidbrooke?, King’s Wood, Kingsnorth, Knockhall, Knockholt,
-Lamberhurst, Leywood, Maiden Wood, Maplescombe, Marden, Mark Beech,
-Marwood, Mereworth Woods, Molash, Mussenden, Nagden, Northwood, Norwood
-(two), Nurstead (old Nutstead), Oakhurst, Oakley, Old Tree, Otterden,
-Oxenden Corner, Paddock Wood, Penenden Heath, Penshurst, Perry Street,
-Perry Wood, Pickhurst Green, Pinden, Plumstead, Plumpton, Quarry Wood,
-Rainden, Ringwould, Rolvenden, Saltwood, Sandhurst, Sevenoaks,
-Shadoxhurst, Sibertswold, Shottenden, Silcox Wood, Sissinghurst,
-Smarden, Snoll Hatch, Snoad Street, Southernden, Southwood, Speldhurst,
-Standen, Staplehurst, Swanscombe Wood, Tenterden, Thornham, Three
-Beeches, Eickenhurst, Waldershare, Waltham, Warden, Weald, Westenhanger,
-Westwood (two), Wissenden, Womenswould, Woodchurch, Woodcut Hill,
-Woodlands (two), Woodruff, Woodside Green, Wouldham.
-
-
-
-
- Land Divisions of Kent.
-
-
-Uninterruptedly from Saxon times Kent has been divided into districts
-called Lathes, and these into Hundreds, and these again into Borowes or
-Townes, the last being in Kent synonymous and used to the exclusion of
-the name parish down to the times of Elizabeth.
-
-First, as to the meanings and uses of these three words.
-
-
-Lathe takes us back to the Saxon Læth for land, and in Latin documents
-appears as Lestus or Lastus, _e.g._, “In Lasto Sanctii Augustini” in a
-deed of 1347. Lambarde, however, derives it from a verb gelathian, to
-assemble; while Latham, following the German writer Zeuss, says the
-Terræ lœticæ were lands given to the Lœti. Lœti is the Roman form of
-Leute, _i.e._, People, _i.e._, the Teutonic mercenaries who were
-imported to defend the Litus Saxonicum—the eastern and south-eastern
-coast—which was especially open to the attacks of Scandinavian pirates.
-The abstruse and involved explanation will hardy be preferred. It is a
-purely Kentish word.
-
-
-Hundred.—This familiar word, first found in the Laws of King Edgar, 1000
-A.D., comes from the old High German (Allemannisch), Huntare or Huntre.
-The Huntares in N. Europe were the sub-divisions of the Gau, the primary
-settlement with independent jurisdiction, a word to be traced in such
-place-names as Spengay and Wormegay, and even in Ely, for its earliest
-form was Eligabirig. But why Hundred? Some say each contained an hundred
-hides of land (but hundreds vary much in size). Some say each was a
-district wherein 100 soldiers had to be forthcoming in war—this approves
-itself to Lambarde and Spelman. Some refer it to the original settlement
-of 100 Jutish warriors, as sub-divisions of the Teutonic army which
-conquered the Britons. Brampton thinks each was to contain 100 villages.
-But in view of the historical and legal use of the word one may prefer
-the number of the freeholders in an area as constituting the Hundred.
-Thus the great legal authority, Blackstone, says: “As 10 families of
-freeholders made a town or tithing, so 10 tithings made an Hundred.”
-Each had its Hundred Court for civil and criminal jurisdiction; each its
-Hundred man or constable; each its Hundred Mote or assembly or
-parliament; each its Hundred-penny, or local tax on and in the Hundred.
-Most English counties were, and are, divided into Hundreds, wapentakes,
-or wards. So Caxton, writing in 1485, says: “In Yorkshire ben xxii
-hondredes.” Of these words Wapentake indicates the defensive military
-organisation of the Danish intruders, and Hundred the more peaceful
-settlements of Jutes and Saxons. A synonym peculiar to Sussex is the
-word Rape, the origin of which is said to be that lands seized by the
-Conqueror were plotted out by the hrepp or rope.
-
-
-Tithings were the divisions of the Hundred or Wapentake or Ward or Rape,
-and the term is used in most counties. But in Kent Borowe or Ton or
-Towne is used instead. A Tything, Freeburgh or Decennary, was a district
-containing ten householders, who were answerable to the King for each
-other’s good behaviour. Each tything formed a little commonwealth, and
-chose its own dean (decanus or chief man of ten) or head, who was
-sometimes called Alderman on account of his age and experience. Most
-commonly, however, he was called the Borsholder from the Anglo-Saxon
-Bohr a surety, and Ealder, head or chief. The members of each tything
-formed a court of justice in which disputes were heard. Right down to
-1836 the inhabitants of an Hundred where damage was done were each
-liable to pay compensation for it. The tendency of small bodies to take
-petty and shortsighted views in social matters is evidenced in John
-Bunyan’s _Pilgrim’s Progress_, where, quoting a much earlier proverb, he
-speaks of “Mr. Penny-wise-pound-foolish,” and “Mr. Get-i’-th’ Hundred
-and lose i’ the Shire.”
-
-Originally there were seven Lathes in Kent—Borowart, Estrei, Middletune,
-Wiwarlet, Limowart, Sudtone, and Elesford, of which the first five
-covered East Kent and the last two West Kent. Each derived its name from
-the chief town in each. Those in East Kent had previously been Roman
-Villas or towns, while Sutton-at-Hone and Aylesford were of great
-antiquity.
-
-Later Borowart and Estrei were united under the name of S. Augustine’s,
-and Middletune and Wiwarlet together formed the Lathe of Sherwinhope,
-which again, by the addition of the Seven Hundreds of the Weald and the
-Hundred of Marden, received its present territory and name of the Lathe
-of Scray.
-
-One finds also a Lestus de Hedelynge containing the three Hundreds of
-Eastry, Quernilo and Beawesberghe. In this district an old wood in
-Waldershare is still Hedlinge.
-
-Since the time of Henry the Third there have been but five Lathes, named
-S. Augustine’s, Shepway, Scray, Aylesford, and Sutton-at-Hone.
-
-Now as to their names.
-
-
-Borowart, Boro-wara-lest, was named from Canterbury, the chief borough
-in Kent, and so means the people of the borough, the chief one. Later it
-was named from S. Augustine’s Abbey in Canterbury, to which a great part
-of the land in the Lathe belonged.
-
-
-Estrei, or Estre Last, named from the ancient town of Eastry (which may
-enshrine the name of the Saxon goddess of Spring, Eastre—whence our
-Easter, from the Christian festival coinciding in time with the heathen
-festival) was absorbed into the Lathe of S. Augustine.
-
-
-Middletune (Middeltuna both in the _Anglo-Saxon Chronicle_ and in
-Domesday) is our Milton by Sittingbourne, and is said to be named from
-being the central town of Kent, as it was then populated and of
-importance.
-
-
-Wiwarlet (Wi-wara-lest), the lest of the people of Wye, together with
-Middletune, became later part of the Lathe of Sherwinhope (Scrawynghop,
-temp. Hen. 3, and Shewynghope 1347). This name was later changed into
-that of Scray. What is the meaning of Sherwinhope? Hope in Saxon denotes
-a river valley, and Sands, in his _Memorials of Old Kent_, speaks of the
-brook Sherway, which falls into the Beult. But what of Scray?
-
-
-Limowart, or Limea, denotes the people of Lymne, the old Roman Portus
-Lemanis, called Limene in 1291, then Lymene, Lymen 1396, Limne 1475, and
-Lymne 1480. I do not find the intrusive and erroneous p in the name
-earlier than 1504. The name was changed to Shippeway or Shipway, temp.
-Henry III., and a place in Lymne is still called Shipway Cross.
-
-
-Sudtone, _i.e._, the town south of Dartford, distinguished from other
-Suttons by the later addition of “at Hone,” which is said to mean low in
-the valley.
-
-
-Elesford, our Aylesford, is so spelled in Domesday, but in the _Saxon
-Chronicle_ it is Egelsford, and in Nennius Egisford. It may very well
-have been named by the Saxons after the Teutonic hero-archer or demigod
-Eigil, though the Celtic Eglwys, a church, has been suggested. It also
-appears as Ægelesthrep, and for this a personal name (_e.g._, Ecglaf),
-with threp or thorp for town has been suggested. But thorp we get from
-the Danes, and find chiefly in the N.E. There are none in Kent.
-
-The place-name difficulty, however, is intensified when we find,
-according to Lambarde in 1570, 13 Hundreds in S. Augustine’s, 14 in
-Shepway, 18 in Scray, 14 in Aylesford, and 8 in Sutton-at-Hone, many of
-them being long obsolete names, such as Cornilo in S. Augustine’s,
-Franchesse in Shepway, Calehill in Scray, Eythorde in Aylesford, and
-Coddeshethe in Sutton-at-Hone. And then in some places there are
-Half-Hundreds, which, however, did not exist before the reign of Edward
-II.
-
-As a matter of nearer local interest I may quote the divisions and
-assessments in the time of the Black Prince of the boroughs of the
-Hundred of Maydstone.
-
- £ s. d.
-
- Borough of Maydestone was assessed at 19 9 2
- Westre (now West Borough) at 44 2
- Stone (now Stone St. Ward) at 78 2
- Loose at 34 4
- Detlinge at 58 4
- (These two villages were attached
- to Maidstone ecclesiastically
- until the reign of Elizabeth).
-
- £ s. d.
-
- Lynton and Crookherst at 50 8
- East Farleyghe at 45 1
- Boxley at 4 3 4
- Sum £38 18 3
-
-I do not understand the omission of the borough of Week or Wyke—whence
-Week Street—of which the old manor house still remains in Week Street,
-unless it was then included in Boxley.
-
-
-The study of the place-names of a county (as has been well done for our
-neighbour Sussex) mainly confines itself to the derivation and meaning
-of existing towns and villages, rivers, and hills, and I have done
-little more in these notes. But the subject is not then exhausted, for
-there is much of great interest to be gathered from the names of
-Hundreds, of Manors, and even of separate farms, and their consideration
-would largely extend the enquiry. For example, the Hundred Eyhorne in
-1347 had the manors of Herbyltone (Harbledown in Harrietsham),
-Rissheforde in Hedcorne, Bromfield and Ledes, Sutton Valence, Olecombe,
-Heryetesham, Thorneham, Eynton, Bengebery, Wrensted, Frensted, Yoke,
-Wytchlinge, Aldington Septvance, Bocton, Malherbe-cum-Wormsell, Fokeham,
-Stockberye, Langele, Bygnor, Aldington Cobham, Otteham, B. Monchelsey
-alias Westboltone, West Farnebourne, Shelve in Lenham, Leneham, Downe,
-Berghestede, Bugeley, Cherletone, and Bressinge, many of these names
-being very unfamiliar now.
-
- [Illustration: decorative glyph]
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-—Silently corrected a few typos.
-
-—Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook
- is public-domain in the country of publication.
-
-—In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by
- _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Place Names in Kent, by John Horsley
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Place Names in Kent
-
-Author: John Horsley
-
-Release Date: September 22, 2020 [EBook #63263]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PLACE NAMES IN KENT ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Brian Coe, Stephen Hutcheson, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
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-</pre>
-
-<div id="cover" class="img">
-<img id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Place Names in Kent" width="1000" height="1550" />
-</div>
-<div class="box">
-<h1>PLACE NAMES
-<br />IN KENT.</h1>
-<p class="tbcenter"><span class="smallest">BY</span>
-<br />CANON J. W. HORSLEY,
-<br /><span class="smaller"><i>Late Vicar of Detling</i>.</span></p>
-<p class="tbcenter"><b>Price 3/6 Net.</b></p>
-<p class="center smaller">MAIDSTONE:
-<br /><span class="sc">&ldquo;South Eastern Gazette&rdquo; Newspaper Co., Ltd.,
-<br />4, High Street</span>.
-<br />1921.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_i">i</div>
-<h2 id="toc" class="center">INDEX</h2>
-<dl class="toc">
-<dt class="small"><span class="sc">Page.</span></dt>
-<dt><a href="#c1">Place-names of Celtic Origin</a> 9</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c2">Roman Names in Kent</a> 17</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c3">Teutonic (Jutish) Names in Kent</a> 20</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c4">Saxon or Jutish Suffixes</a> 26</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c5">Some Common Saxon Elements in Place-names</a> 29</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c6">The Northmen in Kent</a> 42</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c7">The Islands of Kent</a> 46</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c8">Variations in the Spelling of Place-names</a> 49</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c9">Ecclesiastical Place-names</a> 52</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c10">Place-names from Persons</a> 54</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c11">Absurdities in Derivation</a> 57</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c12">Our &ldquo;Tons&rdquo; and &ldquo;Stones&rdquo;</a> 60</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c13">Our &ldquo;Hams&rdquo;</a> 63</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c14">Our &ldquo;Soles,&rdquo; &ldquo;Burys&rdquo; and &ldquo;Hithes&rdquo;</a> 68</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c15">Our &ldquo;Cold Harbours&rdquo;</a> 71</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c16">Anderida</a> 74</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c17">Land Divisions of Kent</a> 78</dt>
-</dl>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_iii">iii</div>
-<h2><span class="small">INTRODUCTION.</span></h2>
-<p>When I was a school boy at Canterbury, in
-the fifties and sixties, my first interest in
-philology was evoked by Trench on <i>The
-Study of Words</i>, and by the more elaborate
-pioneer work, Isaac Taylor&rsquo;s <i>Words and Places</i>,
-while oral instruction was afforded by the lectures
-of Dean Alford and the class teaching of my
-Headmaster, Mitchinson. All four of these
-leaders having been clergymen, it is perhaps
-fitting that, at a considerable distance, both of
-time and of ability, another cleric should attempt
-to localize some of their general teaching.</p>
-<p>Becoming aware in 1920 that there was no
-book dealing with the <i>Place Names of Kent</i>, such
-as has been produced by individuals or small
-committees in the case of some other counties,
-twenty in number; finding also by correspondence
-that McClure, the author of <i>British Place
-Names in Their Historical Setting</i>, says &ldquo;Kent
-is one of the most difficult regions in England to
-trace its topographical history,&rdquo; I set to work to
-read all I could that bore upon the subject.
-Especially when laid up by an ailment, I read
-through twenty-six volumes of <i>Arch&aelig;logia
-Cantiana</i>, and found therein a productive quarry.
-Then, to facilitate the future labours of those
-more competent to deal fully with the subject, I
-wrote a series of weekly articles in the <i>South
-Eastern Gazette</i> last winter, which were found
-<span class="pb" id="Page_iv">iv</span>
-of interest, Mr. E. Salter Davies asking me to
-write something for the <i>Kent Education Gazette</i>
-to enlist the co-operation of school teachers, and
-to remind them of the educational benefit to
-their pupils of a study of local names.</p>
-<p>In some parts of England and Wales this study
-of local place names has been taken up with
-enthusiasm by teachers and scholars, and in this
-connexion it should be noted that the names of
-every lane, house, and field and wood, should be
-ascertained and recorded, even if no meaning can
-be found. Names of this kind change, and the
-old folk who could say why a name was given
-will not be always with us. &ldquo;Terriers&rdquo; and
-Tithe Maps, which can be consulted, if not borrowed,
-will give more names than ordinary maps.</p>
-<p>To such enquiries we may be stimulated by
-shame when we know that Kent is one of the
-counties without a work on its place names, and
-even more by the fact that Norway has been at
-work in this direction since 1896&mdash;the Church and
-the State collaborating and a State grant helping
-in the production of the nineteen volumes already
-published. So too, in Sweden, a committee was
-appointed by Royal authority in 1901, and one
-province has already been dealt with exhaustively.
-Denmark also from 1910, under the Ministry of
-Education, and with State grants, thus recognised
-the linguistic and historico-arch&aelig;ological
-importance of such studies.</p>
-<p>And yet none of these enlightened and progressive
-kingdoms have anything like the advantage
-that England possesses in its Saxon Charters and
-its Domesday Book. More honour to them,
-more shame to us!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_v">v</div>
-<p>Let it be clearly understood, however, from the
-first that I am not writing as an expert on these
-matters, nor as having a direct knowledge of
-Celtic or of Saxon. All I have attempted has
-been simply to collect, for the benefit of those who
-shall be attracted to the study of our place-names
-as elucidating the ancient history of the County,
-information from many sources which will save
-them the time and labour of finding out for themselves
-whether a particular name is old enough
-to be found in Domesday Book, or in later Saxon
-charters and wills; and especially there has been
-in my mind the hope that a committee may be
-appointed to deal as well with Kent as other
-Counties have been, especially by the great
-Anglo-Saxon scholars, Professor Skeats, Professor
-Craigie, of Oxford, and Professor Mawer,
-of Newcastle. For such literary artizans and
-architects as I hope may shortly arise, I am more
-than content to have been but a day labourer, a
-collector of material which others may find worthy
-of scrutiny and perhaps of use.</p>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p1.jpg" alt="decorative glyph" width="538" height="111" />
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_9">9</div>
-<h1 title="">PLACE NAMES IN KENT.</h1>
-<hr />
-<h2 id="c1"><span class="small"><span class="sc">Place Names of Celtic Origin.</span></span></h2>
-<p>Men of Kent must not make too much
-of their county motto, <i>Invicta</i>. As a
-matter of fact, we have been conquered
-at various times, and sometimes before the rest
-of England succumbed to the invader. The
-aborigines, who were probably somewhat like the
-Esquimeaux, a small race, having only stone
-weapons and tools, lived on the fringe of the
-great glacier of the last Ice Age (perhaps 50,000
-years ago), which enabled one (though doubtless
-no one tried) to walk from what is now Middlesex
-and Kent to the North Pole; even the present
-North Sea being part of the great sheet of ice
-which covered all our land down to the north
-bank of the Thames. When climatic conditions
-altered for the better, England (to call it by its
-much later name) became desirable to the great
-west-ward migration of the Celts, who had
-already over-run all North Europe. This was
-the first of the five great waves of peoples who
-from the East seized on Europe, each driving its
-predecessor westward. The Celtic is, at any
-rate, the first to be clearly traced. It was divisible
-into the Gadhelic and the Cymric (or Brythonic)
-element, from the former the Erse, Gaelic,
-and Manx languages being derived, and from the
-latter the Welsh and the Breton (Ancient British
-and Gaulish, the Cornish, and probably the
-Pictish).</p>
-<p>The first branch is said to have passed into
-Britain about 800 B.C., and the second about
-630 B.C. Thenceforward, but for a few place-names,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_10">10</span>
-chiefly of rivers and heights, and still
-fewer words which have survived in our tongue,
-we know little until the visit of Julius C&aelig;sar in
-B.C. 54, from whose <i>Gallic War</i> we learn of
-some of the Celtic tribe-names and place-names.
-Otherwise we know little apart from the river
-roots which we find all over N. Europe (and
-hardly any in England are non-Celtic), especially
-the five main words for river or water&mdash;Afon&mdash;Dur&mdash;Esk&mdash;Rhe&mdash;and
-Don.</p>
-<p>Kent itself in the earliest records is found as
-Ceant from the Celtic Cenn&mdash;a head or headland,
-which again appears on the other side of our
-land as the Mull of Cantire. We have also our
-Chevening, which, like Chevenage, embodies the
-Celtic Cefn&mdash;ridge (still Cefn in Welsh). And
-&ldquo;Kits Coty House&rdquo; on our neighbouring Down
-gives us Ked&mdash;a hollow, and Coit&mdash;a wood, i.e.,
-the hollow dolmen in the wood. Mote Park sounds
-modern enough to some; but our &ldquo;park&rdquo; is the
-Celtic parwyg, an enclosed place, while the much
-later Anglo-Saxon Mote denotes a place of local
-assembly. Dun was their word for a hill-fort,
-and so we have Croydon (with a Saxon prefix) for
-the fortress on the chalk range, though most of
-the old British fortresses which preserved the
-name when occupied by Romans or Saxons are in
-other counties. Penshurst, on the other hand,
-has a Saxon suffix to the Celtic Pen, still unchanged
-in Welsh as meaning a head or hill,
-perhaps only a dialectic form of the Gaelic Ceann,
-or Ken, which we have already noted in &ldquo;Kent.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As to whether the names of Romney and
-Romney Marsh have a Celtic element, opinions
-differ. Isaac Taylor, in his <i>Words and Places</i>,
-has little doubt that they come &ldquo;from the Gaelic
-ruimne,&rdquo; a marsh, and instances Ramsey, in
-the Fens, as coming from the same source, and
-finds it also in Ramsgate, i.e., the passage
-through an opening in the cliffs to the marshes
-behind. But he wrote in 1864, and in some
-<span class="pb" id="Page_11">11</span>
-respects is considered too imaginative by modern
-philologists. Ruim is undoubtedly the British
-name of Thanet&mdash;Ruoihm, or Ruoichim&mdash;preceding
-Tenit, Tenitland, Thanet&mdash;so perhaps the
-situation of Ramsgate in Thanet is all we have to
-consider. McClure ignores &ldquo;ruimne&rdquo; as a derivation;
-but does not explain the Rumin as a name
-of the district. The oldest English form is in
-a charter of 697 A.D. Rumining&mdash;seta, i.e., the
-dwellings of the people of Rumin, and he inclines
-(though admitting it may be far-fetched) to derive
-from &ldquo;Roman,&rdquo; since the whole region is full of
-Roman associations. Our common suffix &ldquo;den,&rdquo;
-for a deep wooded valley, gives us probably a
-Celtic word adopted by the conquering Jutes.
-Perhaps the explanation for so few Celtic names
-of places having survived is accounted for by the
-thoroughness with which the invading Jutes
-either slew or drove far westwards the Celts, and
-so re-named whatever settlements they made.
-Thus, in 452 A.D., according to the <i>Saxon
-Chronicle</i>, Hengist slew 4,000 Britons at Crayford,
-and these must have formed a large proportion
-of the population, and this was only one of
-a series of victories which drove the Celts backward
-into the far west. Purely Celtic Kent was
-prehistoric; Romano-Celtic it was from B.C. 55
-to A.D. 413, and yet marvellously little remains
-of either element.</p>
-<p>This mighty race has left us little record,
-though its language survives in Scotland, Ireland,
-and Wales. In Maidstone Museum we can
-study its weapons, its ornaments, and its
-methods of sepulture; but in our walks in Kent
-we are rarely reminded of its long, as well as
-ancient, occupation of the soil. Yet in what we
-might consider the purest English some undoubtedly
-Celtic words survive, such as basket, crook,
-kiln, fleam, barrow, ashlar, rasher, mattock,
-bran, gown, flannel.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_12">12</div>
-<p>Availing myself of what has been written by
-Celtic or Saxon scholars, I turn to the river names
-of Kent, of which some are obviously Celtic and
-others as obviously Saxon.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Ash.</span>&mdash;The western branch of the Stour is so
-named, and Ashford was anciently Esshetsford.
-Rivers have sometimes been named from the
-trees on their banks, and besides our Ash-ford,
-we find elsewhere Ashbrook and Ashbourne;
-though the common Celtic esk for water or river
-may also be considered. In this connection I
-note that in a direct line we have near Detling,
-Boxley, Thornham, Hollingbourne (Anglo-Saxon
-Holeyn is holly), possibly Bearsted from the
-Saxon Berc for birch, and Ashford from Aesc,
-our ash.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Brook.</span>&mdash;This later, or English, name for a
-small stream appears only as a termination. We
-have Cranbrook, a reminder, like Cranbourne
-elsewhere, of the time when cranes were not uncommon
-in England. These are the places:
-Brook, a village on a tributary of the Stour;
-Brookland, near a branch of the Rother; and
-Brook Street, near Woodchurch. And may not
-Kidbrooke, or Kedbrook, be &ldquo;the brook from the
-Coed&rdquo;&mdash;the Celtic word for a wood?</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Bourne.</span>&mdash;The Anglo-Saxon Burne for stream
-appears not only in the Bourne and Bourne Park,
-and the various Nail-bournes, or intermittently
-flowing brooks, but also in Bekesbourne, Bishopsbourne,
-Patrixbourne, Littlebourne, the Ravensbourne,
-Hollingbourne, Brabourne (the broad
-bourne), Northbourne, and perhaps Sittingbourne,
-although this is on a creek rather than a
-brook.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Cray.</span>&mdash;From the Saxon Cregga, a small
-brook, a tributary of the Darent or Derwent. In
-457 A.D. Hengist and his son &AElig;sc (Ash, or,
-metaphorically, ship) slew 4,000 Britons at
-Crecganford, and drove the rest out of Kent to
-<span class="pb" id="Page_13">13</span>
-Lundenbyrg (London). So the <i>Saxon Chronicle</i>
-records. Another old chronicler calls this the
-battle of the Derwent. The valley of the Cray
-contains the villages of Crayford, St. Paul&rsquo;s (probably
-S. Paulinus&rsquo;) Cray, St. Mary&rsquo;s Cray, Foot&rsquo;s
-Cray, and the district is commonly called the
-Crays.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Darent.</span>&mdash;Like Dover&rsquo;s Dour, from the Celtic
-root Dur for water or river, comes the Der-went,
-of which Darent is a variation. Dwr-gwyn in
-Welsh is the clear water. There are four Derwents
-in England, besides Lake Derwent Water.
-Dartford is the ford of the Darent.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Dour.</span>&mdash;The living Celtic tongues of Wales,
-Ireland and Scotland preserve the Celtic Dur&mdash;Dwr
-in Welsh, Dur in G&aelig;lic and Erse. There
-are other Dours in Fife and Aberdeen, and the
-Dover or Dur-beck in Notts, and in Sussex the
-Roman itinerary gives Portum Adurni, whence it
-has been assumed that there was an Adour river.
-But Prichard gives forty-four ancient names containing
-this root in Italy, Germany, Gaul, and
-Britain.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Eden.</span>&mdash;The Eden, on which is Edenbridge, is
-a tributary of the Medway. Various rivers of this
-name are found also in Cumberland, Yorks, Fife
-and Roxburgh, containing the Celtic root Dan,
-Don, or Den, for water or river.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Lee.</span>&mdash;This is a brook rising at Eltham Place,
-and giving its name to Lee Street and Lee, thence
-flowing to Lewisham. The more important river
-Lea on the opposite side of the Thames is called
-Lygan in the <i>Saxon Chronicle</i>. In Essex also
-there is the Lea-beck, which shows a Celtic name
-with a suffix attributable to the Danish marauders
-whose becks are more common in the north of
-England. The dropping of the last syllable of
-Lygan would give the Lee.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Len.</span>&mdash;This short tributary of the Medway has
-been neglected by writers on place-names; but it
-<span class="pb" id="Page_14">14</span>
-might be the Celtic Levn, smooth, as in Loch
-Leven and three rivers of that name in Scotland,
-besides others in Gloucestershire, Yorks, Cornwall,
-Cumberland, and Lancashire.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Medway.</span>&mdash;The first syllable is adjectival, like
-the Tam (broad or still) in Tamesa or Thames,
-and is the Celtic Mwg, vapour, whence our
-&ldquo;muggy.&rdquo; The second is from a varying Celtic
-root, represented in Welsh by gwy or wy, for
-water. Most of the river-names from this root are
-in Wales; but besides the Medway there is the
-Solway, on the Scottish border, and such names
-as Weymouth and Weybridge. In the <i>Saxon
-Chronicle</i> it is spelled Medew&aelig;gan. Worth recording
-(if only to discard them) are some derivations
-given in Ferguson&rsquo;s <i>River Names</i>. Writing
-in 1862 (since when some study has been more
-scientific), he gives the suggestion of the German,
-Grimm, that the name refers to a cup of mead
-overturned by a river god! Also that Gibson&rsquo;s
-<i>Etymological Geography</i> derives it from the
-Latin medius because the river flows through the
-middle of Kent! and this, says Gibson, is the
-usual acceptation. Ferguson throughout has
-Sanscrit on the brain, and so refers us to a
-Sanscrit root, mid, to soften, and thinks it named
-from its gentle flow. But which of our Kentish
-rivers are not gentle?</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Quaggy.</span>&mdash;One of the two brooks at Lewisham.
-Quag may be the same as Quag in quagmire, and
-the second syllable the Anglo-Saxon &ldquo;ea&rdquo; for
-water or river, cognate with the old High German
-&ldquo;aha&rdquo; and the Latin &ldquo;aqua.&rdquo; In Rosetti&rsquo;s
-poem we find &ldquo;I fouled my feet in quag-water.&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Ravensbourne.</span>&mdash;When Teutonic colonists or
-invaders, dispossessing the Celts, inquired the
-name of a stream, they took the Celtic word to
-be a proper instead of a common name, and so
-added their own name for water or river.
-Later, when the English tongue was evolved,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_15">15</span>
-&ldquo;water&rdquo; was sometimes added to the Celtic, or
-Celtic-plus-Saxon, name. Thus, in Wansbeck-water,
-Wan is Alfon and Evon; S is a vestige of
-the Gadhelic visge; Beck is the Norse addition;
-and Water the later English when it was forgotten
-what Wansbeck meant. Thus our present
-name means River-water-river-water! So
-Ravensbourne (interpreted inanely in a Lewisham
-print by a legend of a raven and a bone) is really
-the Celtic Avon, with the Saxon addition of
-Bourne, so common in Kent for stream.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Rother.</span>&mdash;A mainly Sussex stream which
-forms part of the boundary of Kent. It is said
-to be the Celtic Rhud-dwr&mdash;that is Red Water.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Stour.</span>&mdash;There are other rivers of this name in
-Suffolk, Dorset, Warwickshire, and Worcestershire,
-besides the St&ouml;r in Holstein, the Stura, a
-tributary of the Po, and the Stura (now the Store)
-in Italy, all probably named from the union of
-two Celtic words for water, Is and Dwr. Some
-regard it as merely the intensitive of Dwr, as in
-Welsh the prefix Ys is used to intensify. Note
-that a unique river name is a rarity.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Swale.</span>&mdash;Bede, the Saxon historian, writes of
-the baptisms by S. Paulinus, in the Sualua. This
-is the Swale, which makes Sheppey an island.
-There are the East and the West Swale and
-Swalecliff, and the origin may be from the Anglo-Saxon
-Swellan, to swell. There are other
-Swales in Britain and Germany.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Thames.</span>&mdash;This means the Broad, or Still,
-Water, from the Celtic adjective Tam and the
-root Is for water, which is reduplicated in the
-name Isis for the river at Oxford, higher than
-where the Thames falls into it. There is a river
-Tame in four of our counties.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Wantsum.</span>&mdash;This much-dwindled stream
-separates Thanet from the mainland, and is called
-Wantsumu by Bede. The word is said to be not
-Celtic (as are most river names here and on the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_16">16</span>
-Continent); but Teutonic. Want or Went, meant
-a Way, and Som had the same qualifying force
-as in the word &ldquo;winsome,&rdquo; that is, equivalent to
-the &ldquo;able&rdquo; in &ldquo;lovable.&rdquo; There is a Wensum,
-a tributary of the Yare, near Norwich. While
-in early days the north branch of the Stour by
-Thanet was not fordable, this water was &ldquo;go-able&rdquo;&mdash;to
-coin a word. The &ldquo;way&rdquo; is not necessarily
-a water way. At Ightham, Seven Vents is
-the name of a place where seven roads meet.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Yenlade</span> or <span class="sc">Yenlet</span>.&mdash;&ldquo;Applied by Lewis to
-the north and south mouths of the estuary of the
-Wantsum, which made Thanet an island. The
-A.S. gen-lad means a discharging of a river into
-the sea, or a smaller river into one larger.&rdquo; Ladan
-or hladan means to load or lade. Lambarde
-wrote in 1570 &ldquo;Yenlade or yenlet betokeneth an
-Indraught or Inlett of water into the land.&rdquo;
-There are two or three places of this name in the
-mouth of the Thames. Yantlet Creek is in the
-Isle of Grain.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Beult.</span>&mdash;The final t is not found in the earliest
-records I have seen, where the name is Beule.
-One of our best Kent arch&aelig;ologists suggests the
-Saxon verb Beauland, to turn or twist, as the
-origin. I think, however, we may go further
-back and find no exception to the rule that most
-of our rivers were named by the Celts, for I find
-the Erse or Irish Buol or Biol for water, and in
-addition to Continental rivers which contain this
-root there is the Buil (now called the Boyle) in
-Ireland, the Beela in Westmorland, and the
-Beauly in Inverness.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_17">17</div>
-<h2 id="c2"><span class="small"><span class="sc">Roman Names in Kent.</span></span></h2>
-<p>The first appearance of Kent in history is in
-the Gallic War of Julius C&aelig;sar, who paid
-us the compliment of saying, <i>Ex his omnibus,
-longe sunt humanissimi qui Cantium
-incolunt</i>, on which Shakespeare wrote, &ldquo;Kent
-in commentaries C&aelig;sar writ, Is termed
-the civil&rsquo;st place in all the isle.&rdquo; Of his
-presence here, however, the only relic is
-perhaps more in the realm of legend than of history.
-There is a mound or barrow at Chilham
-known as Julaber&rsquo;s or Juliberry&rsquo;s grave, which
-has been referred to Julius Laberius, an officer of
-Julius C&aelig;sar, slain in a battle here against the
-British Celts. Julius C&aelig;sar left our shores 54
-B.C., and our history is a blank until A.D. 43
-(roughly for a hundred years) when the Emperor
-Claudius came to conquer us, in which campaign
-Titus took a part, who in A.D. 70 captured
-Jerusalem&mdash;as later some Detling young men entered
-Jerusalem under General Allenby! Kent and
-the Thames tribes were first conquered, and in
-the occupation of Britain from A.D. 43 to A.D.
-418 it was the rest of the country which gave
-military work to the Romans.</p>
-<p>Considering this long occupation, ended only
-by the necessary recall of the troops to defend
-falling Rome, it is surprising that so few place-names,
-not only in Kent but anywhere, are attributable
-to our masters. Those usually instanced
-are Speen (anciently Spin&aelig;, thorns); Pontefract
-(the broken bridge); Chester (Castra, a camp),
-with its later derivations, the Anglian Caster and
-the Saxon Chester; and Caerleon (Castra
-Legionum&mdash;the camp of the Legions); and of
-these not one is in Kent. The chief centres of the
-sparse population, and the natural landmarks of
-rivers and mountains, preserved the names given
-<span class="pb" id="Page_18">18</span>
-earlier by the Celts, while our villages with few
-exceptions are Scandinavian or Teutonic, otherwise
-Norse or Saxon. Prof. Green, in his <i>History
-of the English People</i>, is doubtless right in saying
-that &ldquo;only in the great towns were the
-Britons Romanized. The tribes of the rural districts
-remained apart, speaking their own tongue
-and owing some traditional allegiance to their
-native chiefs.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Kent had more than its share of the mighty
-road-making of Rome; more than its share
-(except in the turbulent northern boundary of
-England) of Roman military stations; but though
-the roads remain, forts are only bits of ruins or
-foundations, and the names have perished or been
-changed. So, too, in Kent were most of the nine
-Roman ports put under the jurisdiction of the
-Comes Littoris Saxonici. In the Antonine
-Itinerary of the fourth century the route from the
-Northern Wall in Dumfriesshire to our Richborough
-has as its last station Londonio (London),
-Noviomago (site unknown), 10 miles; Vigniacis
-(? Springhead), 18 miles; Durobrivis (Rochester),
-9 miles; Durolevo (? near Sittingbourne), 13
-miles; Duroverno (Canterbury), 12 miles; and
-Rutupis (Richborough), 12 miles. In no case has
-the Roman name survived, with the exception
-of the twisted Rutupis, for Lundon-ium is the old
-name adopted by the Romans. Other routes add
-Dubris (Dover), 14 miles from Duroverno, and
-Portus Limanis (Lympne), 16 miles from Dubris.
-Where we find Street it is, of course, the Saxon
-form of the Roman Strata Via, <i>i.e.</i>, paved road,
-and so our Kentish Stone Street ran from the
-fortified port (as it was then, though inland now)
-of Lympne to Canterbury; and Watling Street
-(the name still surviving in London and Canterbury)
-from their other fortified ports of Rutupi&aelig;
-(Richborough) to Canterbury, London, Stony
-Stratford, and Chester. But Watling is not
-Latin, and in the <i>Saxon Chronicle</i> the name is
-<span class="pb" id="Page_19">19</span>
-W&aelig;clingastr&aelig;t. So, too, the Well Street which
-ran from Maidstone into the Weald&mdash;with no
-definite end&mdash;is the road in the Wald, or Weald,
-forest. We may perhaps add the places ending
-in &ldquo;hall&rdquo; as a relic of the Roman aula. These
-are more common in Thanet and Romney Marsh
-than elsewhere, and in both these places Romans
-had much to do.</p>
-<p>The names given to the two Roman fortresses
-which guarded the Wantsum (then an important
-water way), Regulbium and Rutupi&aelig;, were hard
-for Saxon lips, and so were changed into Raculf-cestre,
-whence Reculvers, and Repta-caester,
-later Ratesburgh, whence our Richborough. So
-also the Roman name of Rochester&mdash;Durobrevis
-(the stronghold of the bridges) became in Saxon
-times, Roribis, then Hrofibrevi. This was shortened
-into Hrofi, which again was later assumed
-to be the name of a man, and so Bede (twelve
-hundred years ago) gives us Hrofes-c&aelig;ster,
-whence our Rochester.</p>
-<p>Chislet, however, earlier Cistelet, probably
-preserves the Roman Casteletum, a small castle
-or camp. And Cheriton (there are others in
-other counties) is said to be derived as to its
-first two syllables from cerasus, cherry, the
-Romans having introduced this tree about A.D.
-60. They also brought the plum&mdash;prunes&mdash;and
-so we get our Plumstede for Plumstead, adjoining
-Woolwich, and Plumford, in Ospringe.</p>
-<p>Also where Wick as a termination is not the
-Scandinavian Wic or Bay, and so a coastal
-name, it comes from the Latin Vicus, a row of
-houses, and is the Saxonised form. Thus our
-West Wickham, Wickhambreux, Sheldwich,
-and so forth, record how the Saxons adopted but
-changed the name given by the Romans.
-McClure suggests that Faversham (Fefres-ham
-in 811, Febresham in 858, and Faversham in
-Domesday) may be a survival of the Latin Faber,
-smith, in the most Latinized part of Kent, and
-<span class="pb" id="Page_20">20</span>
-on their chief road. The first part of the word
-is plainly a genitive case, and there seems to be
-no similar Saxon designation.</p>
-<p>On the Continent, as well as in England, the
-name Ventum, or Venta, is the Latin for a
-market or sale place. Venta Silurum, for
-example, has now as its neighbour Chepstow,
-<i>i.e.</i>, Ceapstow, the Market. Having lived for
-eight years as a boy in Wincheap, outside the
-walls of Canterbury, it occurs to me that Win
-may be Ven from Ventum, while cheap gives the
-Saxon synonym. Its earlier forms are Wencheape,
-Wyndcheps, and Wincheapfield. Of
-course, it looks like winemarket, but would the
-Romans have had one? And, if so, would it
-not have been within the walls? On the other
-hand, vineyards&mdash;probably first started by the
-Romans&mdash;were not uncommon much later in
-Kent, several near Maidstone, and one&rsquo;s estimation
-of the pleasantness of wine from outdoor
-grapes is increased by finding in old charters
-that in some cases tenants were bound to bring
-to an abbot or a lord of the manor &ldquo;a bushel of
-blakenberis.&rdquo; This would sweeten and colour
-the English port!</p>
-<p>Few, indeed, are the verbal relics of the
-Romans, though they were here for 400 years.
-While the earlier Celts have bequeathed to us
-many words and names, but few works, the
-Romans left us few words but some mighty
-works.</p>
-<h2 id="c3"><span class="small"><span class="sc">Teutonic (Jutish) Names in Kent.</span></span></h2>
-<p>The Romans who had conquered, ruled,
-and exploited our land for four centuries,
-departed in A.D. 411, owing to the dire
-necessity of defending their own land against
-the Goths from Northern Europe. Already here
-they had been attacked and pressed southwards
-<span class="pb" id="Page_21">21</span>
-by the Picts of the Highlands, aided by the Scots
-of Ireland. To avoid Pictish conquest the
-Britons offered land and pay to the English, who
-up to then had been aiding the Picts.</p>
-<p>Who were these English? A long peninsula
-runs northwards (as few do) from Denmark, and
-separates the North Sea from the Baltic. Herein,
-our real home or cradle, dwelt three tribes of
-the Low German stock, Angles, Jutes, and
-Saxons, and as to Kent it was the Jutes from
-Jutland who, under Hengist and Horsa, in A.D.
-449, landed at Ebbsfleet in Thanet, as did others
-in the Isle of Wight, the Islands in both cases
-forming a great naval and military station, from
-which the hinterlands of Kent and Hants could
-be overrun. The later, and larger, seizures of
-the Saxons were all the southern counties,
-Essex, Sussex, Middlesex, and Wessex, while
-the sphere of the Angles spread upwards from
-what we still call East Anglia. Quarrels with
-these mercenaries arose as to pay, and the Britons
-of Kent resolved to fight. Hrofesceastre
-was too strong, and so southward turned
-Hengist along the Celtic country by Kits Coty
-House, and then swooped down on Aylesford
-and won a battle which meant the winning of
-England. Horsa fell in the moment of victory,
-and the flint heap of Horsted preserves his
-name, and has been held to mark his grave.
-Kentish landowners fled to France; the British
-labourers to the vast forest; churches gave no
-sanctuary, for the heathen Jutes raged most
-against the clergy.</p>
-<p>And so for two centuries the war of dispossession
-and slaughter went on, until Britain was
-a land, not of Britons, but of Englishmen
-(Angles, or Anglo-Saxons, as they are also
-called), while even of their language, as we have
-seen, few words lingered. Six years later the
-shore-castles of Dover, Richborough, and
-Lympne succumbed. Then, in A.D. 447, another
-<span class="pb" id="Page_22">22</span>
-tribe, the Saxons, came for a share in the goodly
-spoil, overran Anderida, the fortress of the
-great forest, and &ldquo;slew all that were herein, nor
-was there afterwards one Briton left,&rdquo; at any
-rate, in Kent. This Saxon, or strictly speaking,
-Jutish, invasion has given us most of our blood,
-and the greater part of our tongue, our territorial
-divisions, most names of places, and those
-of the days of the week.</p>
-<p>Following the conquerors came colonists, and
-in the Saxon districts of England (and Kent is
-the most Saxon of all) we find the names, not
-of individual immigrants, but of families or
-clans. These family settlements are denoted by
-the termination <i>ing</i>, which was the usual Anglo-Saxon
-patronymic, corresponding to our later
-&ldquo;son&rdquo; in Johnson, etc. So the sons of Charles
-Brown, who died in Detling, would in earlier
-days be called the Brownings&mdash;as the progeny
-of a duck are ducklings, and of a goose goslings.
-It has been held that when the suffix
-ham or ton is added it denotes a filial colony or
-offshoot from the original settlement of the clan.
-There are between two and three thousand
-places in England which contain the root &ldquo;ing,&rdquo;
-although some (mainly in the north) come from
-a Norse and substantive &ldquo;eng&rdquo; or &ldquo;ing&rdquo; which
-means meadow. Kemble makes 22 original settlements
-in Kent, and 29 filial offshoots, whereas
-the western or northern counties have no original,
-although, between them, 169 filial settlements.</p>
-<p>If we may thus distinguish two classes of place
-names which survive in Kent, we have the Bobbings
-at Bobbing, the H&ocirc;cings at Hucking, the
-Harlings at Harling, the Boerlings at Barling,
-the Berlings at Birling, the Bollings at Bowling,
-the Garlings at Garlinge, the Hallings at Halling,
-the Hircelings at Hecklinge, the Horings
-at Herringe, the Mollings at Mailing, the Wealings
-at Welling, the Beltings at Beltring, the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_23">23</span>
-Cerrings at Charing, the Petlings at Pedling,
-the Wickings at Witchling, the Bermarings at
-Barming. In one case, however, an individual
-is commemorated in a place-name&mdash;Hemmings
-Bay, near Margate, is the scene of the landing
-of a Danish chieftain in 1009 A. D. There were
-many Saxons in Thanet under Roman rule (as
-interments have shown), but few place names
-are found there of the patronymic kind, the exceptions
-being Garlinge, Birchington, Halling
-Court, Osinghelle, Ellington, and Newington&mdash;of
-which some are doubtful. What about
-Detling? one of my readers may say. I inclined
-for some time to the meaning deep meadow (as
-Deptford is the deep fiord or bay), in allusion to
-its position between the vast forest above and
-the extensive marshes below; but Mr. McClure
-will not hear of &ldquo;ing&rdquo; a meadow, in the South
-of England, and one Oxford Professor of Anglo-Saxon
-writes me as follows: &ldquo;The evidence for
-ing &lsquo;meadow,&rsquo; south of Lincolnshire is so scanty
-or dubious that it would require pretty strong
-evidence to establish its recurrence in Kent
-place-names.&rdquo; In that case one must fall back
-upon a Saxon ancestor, and lately in Maidstone
-were found both Major D&rsquo;Aeth and Mr. De&rsquo;Ath,
-whose families would be Deathlings in early
-Saxon days.</p>
-<p>Then, of offshoots, we have in Kent the
-&AElig;lingtons at Allington, the Ellings at Ellington,
-the Aldings at Aldington, the Eorpings at
-Orpington, the Bennings at Boddington, the
-Gillings at Gillingham, the Cennings at Kennington,
-the Cosings at Cossington, the Dodings
-at Doddington, the D&oelig;fings at Davington, the
-Leasings at Lossenham, the P&oelig;fings at Pevington,
-the Syfings at Sevington, the Wickings at
-Wickinghurst, the Lodings at Loddington, the
-Ellings at Ellington, the Bosings at Bossingden
-(and Bossenden), the Adings at Addington, the
-&OElig;slings at Ashlingham, and possibly the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_24">24</span>
-Beecings at Birchington and Beckenham. As
-illustrating the westward migration of the Teutonic
-race we may note, to take one clan, that,
-starting from Germany, the Hemings name
-Hemingen in Germany, Hemminghausen in
-Westphalia, Hemingstadt in Holstein, Heming
-in Lorraine and in Alsace, Hemington in Northamptonshire
-and Somerset, and Hemingbrough
-in Yorks.</p>
-<p>It may help some in their enquiry into the
-origin of place-names if I note that of old, and
-by Saxon lips, the vowel &ldquo;e&rdquo; was pronounced
-like our &ldquo;a.&rdquo; So, in the case of Berfreystone,
-Berham, Bernefield, Chert, Chertham, Crey,
-Dertford, Esseherst, Essetlesford, Freningham,
-Herietsham, Herty, Hertleye, Hese, Mergate,
-Remmesgate, Reyersh, Smeredenne, and Werehorne&mdash;the
-vowel sound remaining although the
-vowel was changed when, for example, Hese
-became our Hayes. And another point is that
-in the Kentish dialect th (a separate character in
-Saxon) often becomes d, <i>e.g.</i>, gardering for
-gathering, and dare and dem for there and them.
-This still survives in remote places and aged
-persons. So Beddersden for Bethersden.</p>
-<p>I may here add some instances of what in
-some cases aids, and in other cases hinders,
-a knowledge of the origin and meaning of a
-place-name&mdash;that is the very various ways in
-which the name has been spelled. Generally,
-the earlier the form the better guide to the
-meaning. It will be found that spelling was
-often so vague that even a lawyer in writing an
-old record or will may spell a name differently
-in the same document, and in most cases in
-medi&aelig;val times the sound of the word ruled its
-spelling. Some examples of multiform names in
-Kent I give here.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Edenbridge.</span>&mdash;Edeling-bridge, 1225, Ethonbrigge
-1457, Edonbregge 1473, Edinbregg and
-Edingbregg 1483, Etonbrigge 1499, Etonbreg
-<span class="pb" id="Page_25">25</span>
-1528, Etonbridge 1534, Edulwestbridge 1539,
-with other forms of which I have not noted the
-dates, Edelmesbrigge, Pons Edelmi. The bridge
-element is clear throughout, but it would also
-seem that the old name of the river Eden was
-the Edel. Of this there may be evidence which
-I have not yet come across.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Bethersden</span> in its earliest form is Beatrichesdenne
-(1194), which, on the analogy of other
-places, would seem to point to the church being
-dedicated to a local S. Beatrice; but at the same
-date, and since, its patron saint was S. Margaret.
-Possibly an heiress Beatrice held the
-manor, as Patrixbourne is called, not from the
-saint of the Church, but from one who held
-the manor, which in Domesday was simply
-called Bourne. Later I find Beterisdenne 1389,
-Betrycheden 1468, Betresden 1535, Beatherisden
-1552, and later Beathersden, Beddersden (by
-Kent dialect change of th into d), and Bethersden.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Charing</span> is Ciorminege in a Saxon charter of
-799 A.D., which proved too hard for old English
-or middle English mouths, so that one finds
-many later variants, such as Cheerynge 1396,
-Carings, Cerringes (and Cherinche in Domesday
-Book 1036), Cherrving (temp. Edw. 3rd), and at
-last Charing in 1505.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Cuxton</span>, probably derived from a personal
-name, like Cuckfield in Sussex, is Codestane in
-Domesday, Coklestone 1472, Cokston 1503,
-Cokynston 1533, Coxston 1538, Cokestone 1559,
-and Codstan, Coklestane, Colestane, Cukelstane,
-and Cookstone in other documents.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Goodneston</span>, near Ash and Wingham, is no
-doubt Goodwin&rsquo;s Town, and once had the name
-of &ldquo;Godstanstone-les-Elmes, alias Nelmes, near
-Wingham.&rdquo; In 1208 it was Gutsieston, but in
-1512 had settled down into Godenston, previous
-variations having been Goldstaneston, Gounceston,
-Groceston, Gusseton, and Guston.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_26">26</div>
-<h2 id="c4"><span class="small"><span class="sc">Saxon or Jutish Suffixes.</span></span></h2>
-<p>In the earliest days of which we have knowledge
-all Kent was practically either forest
-or marsh, with a little cornland in Thanet
-and sheep pastures in Sheppey, and it was
-plainly on the edges of the forests (Blean and
-Anderida running right across the county from
-Whitstable to Cranbrook) that the early settlers
-from Jutland made their homes. Like pioneer
-backwoodsmen in Canada and elsewhere, they
-had first to clear of trees, and then to fence, the
-spot each family had chosen. For 25 years I
-have passed annually through the agricultural
-districts of Belgium, Alsace, Lorraine, and
-Switzerland (and sometimes France), and two
-things always strike me&mdash;that English agriculturists
-are not on the whole so thrifty, so tidy,
-or so hardworking, as their Continental brethren,
-and that abroad they seem to have neither need
-nor desire for hedges or other fences. Our
-colonists in England, however, show in place-names
-how necessary they thought enclosures
-to be.</p>
-<p>First there is the ubiquitous &ldquo;<i>ton</i>&rdquo; as a suffix.
-The sons of &AElig;lla, the Ellings, made their Ellington.
-Now &ldquo;ton&rdquo; means an enclosure, and
-especially enclosed land with a dwelling thereon.
-Then it comes to signify the house on the enclosure.
-In Scotland even now the &ldquo;toun&rdquo; is
-the farmhouse and outbuildings, and in Kent I
-find in a charter of 1432 a conveyance of &ldquo;land
-with all Houses ... called Wattyshagh, formerly
-called Taune.&rdquo; Then, as the original
-house became a nucleus, and a hamlet swelled
-into a village, and a village into a town, we got
-our modern sense of the word, which, however,
-is later than the Norman conquest.</p>
-<p>Even earlier than &ldquo;ton&rdquo; would be &ldquo;<i>field</i>,&rdquo;
-which is not the same as lea or mead, but
-<span class="pb" id="Page_27">27</span>
-denotes a patch of felled or cleared land. So
-we have our Chelsfield, Oakfield, Ifield, Broomfield,
-Whitfield, Swingfield, Fairfield, Hothfield,
-Stalisfield, Clexfield, Longfield, Fieldgreen, and
-Netherfield, in the more forestal part of Kent,
-while in the list of parishes in the Rochester
-diocese, where marsh and down prevailed, I find
-only one parish&mdash;Matfield&mdash;which suggests old
-felling of trees. Sometimes, however, there
-would be attractive glades or <i>leys</i> on the outskirts
-of the forest, already pastured or cultivated
-to a certain extent. Hence arose not only
-place-names, but nick-names (sur-names came
-much later) of persons who lived or worked
-therein, such as John of the Horse Ley, John of
-the Cow Ley, John of the Sheep Ley, John of
-the Swine Ley, which later became surnames.
-Isaac Taylor enumerates 22 leys in Central Kent,
-but one cannot test his figures without knowing
-what map he used. Hence as place-names our
-Hartley, Swanley, Langley, Bromley, Oakley or
-Ockley, Hockley, Bickley, Whitley, Boxley,
-Mydley, Barley, Brenchley, Elmley, Ripley,
-Angley, Beverley, Gorseley Wood, Harley,
-Pluckley, Throwley, Bexley, Leybourne, Shirley,
-Kelmsley, Ridley, Tudeley, etc.</p>
-<p>Then there were, and are, the <i>Dens</i>, forty-two
-of them in Central Kent, says Isaac Taylor;
-but Mr. Furley, in his <i>Weald of Kent</i>, says that
-the great manor of Aldington alone possessed
-forty-four dens. It was probably a Celtic word
-adopted by the Saxons, and designated a wooded
-valley mostly used for swine pasture. So we
-have the Ardenne forest in France and Belgium,
-and elsewhere in England Henley in Arden and
-the Forest of Arden, which stretched from
-Gloucestershire to Nottingham. Down to the
-17th century the &ldquo;Court of the Dens&rdquo; was held
-at Aldington, near Hythe, to determine pasture
-rights and wrongs.</p>
-<p>One cannot enumerate all the Kentish dens
-which might be found not only on the map but
-<span class="pb" id="Page_28">28</span>
-in old manorial records. In old Tenterden alone
-there were Pittesden, Igglesden, Strenchden,
-Godden, Gatesden, Bugglesden, Finchden,
-Twisden, Lovedene, Haffendene, Brissendene,
-Haldene, and Little Haldene as manors, of some
-of which even the names have departed. I find
-that of the 16 parishes in the rural deanery of
-West Charing eight end in den and five in hurst,
-and I think Furley is in error when he says that
-only 16 extant parishes (as distinct from manors)
-in Kent end in den. A small original settlement
-in a den might soon increase in size even in
-early Saxon times, and so we have several
-parishes and manors called Denton. Other
-local place-names which are due to their position
-in the old forest land are those which end in
-<i>hyrst</i> or, later, hurst. Hursts and Cherts were
-the denser parts of the forest, and the word is
-said to apply specially to wooded high ground.
-The two words may be originally the same, with
-the old German Hart (whence the Hartz mountains),
-as parent. So we have Bredhurst, Goudhurst,
-Hawkhurst, Hurst Wood near Peckham,
-Penshurst, Sandhurst, Staplehurst, Chart, and
-two or three score more.</p>
-<p>Another forest name is <i>Holt</i> or Hot&mdash;more
-common in Surrey than in Kent. The German
-is Holtz, which means both a wood and wood
-the material. It is also a common prefix or
-suffix in Iceland. Isaac Taylor gives us only
-one Holt in his table, for Central Kent at any
-rate, but we know Knockholt beeches, Birchholt
-near Smeeth, an Acholt (Oakwood) in each of
-the manors of Dartford, Wingham, and Monkton,
-and Hot Wood; while further study is
-necessary to determine whether from Holt or
-from Hoath or Hoth (a heath) come Hothfield,
-Oxenhoath, and Hoath or Hoad near Reculver.
-&ldquo;Another common suffix in the neighbourhood
-of ancient forests,&rdquo; says Isaac Taylor, &ldquo;is
-Hatch&mdash;a hitch-gate, H&ecirc;che in French.&rdquo; He
-<span class="pb" id="Page_29">29</span>
-gives no example from Kent, but we know our
-Chartham Hatch, Ivy Hatch, and Mersham
-Hatch and Snoll Hatch. <i>Wold</i> or Weald, a
-wood, is not so common as one would expect,
-but we have Sibertswold and Wymynswold, and
-Waltham and Waldershare. <i>Sn&oelig;d</i> is a Saxon
-word for a piece of wood in 8th century charters,
-and this survives in Hamersnoth near Romney,
-Nod Wall near Lydd, Frisnoth near Appledore,
-Sibersnode in the Hundred of Ham, Snode Hill,
-Snodehurst, Snodland, and Snodebeam, a manor
-in Yalding.</p>
-<h2 id="c5"><span class="small"><span class="sc">Some Common Saxon Elements in Place-Names.</span></span></h2>
-<p>&mdash;<span class="smaller">HAM</span> = Ham means homestead, but&mdash;hamm
-an enclosure or bend in a river, the former being
-the more common. It is only by early Saxon
-documents that we can tell which word is meant.
-Alkham for the first, perhaps the Hundred of
-Ham for the latter.</p>
-<p class="tb">&mdash;<span class="smaller">ING</span>, in the middle or end of a name means
-&ldquo;sons of.&rdquo; A final ling is also a patronymic
-when the name ends in ol or ele. Thus Donnington
-is the settlement of the sons of Donna,
-and as Didling or Dudelyng in Sussex (with 13th
-century forms of Dedling and Dedlinge) was
-derived from Dyddeling as descendants of
-Dyddel, this may throw some light on Detling
-in Kent.</p>
-<p class="tb">&mdash;<span class="smaller">MERE</span> = lake, or gem&aelig;ru boundary. Lakes
-are few in Kent, so Baddlesmere may indicate a
-boundary, while Mereworth (anciently Marewe)
-may indicate neither. Mearesflete in Thanet,
-and Mere, a manor in Rainham, may point to a
-personal name. Walmer is said to be named
-from the marshy ground behind the Wall, or old
-raised beach, which begins by Walmer Castle.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_30">30</div>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Br&#333;c</span> = a brook, as in the dialects of Kent and
-Sussex, also low-lying ground, not necessarily
-with running water. So Brook, and Brookland,
-and Kidbrook.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Burna</span> = stream. So Bourne, Littlebourne,
-etc.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Cnoll</span> = hillock (Cnol in Welsh and kn&ouml;l in
-Swedish). So Knole, and perhaps Knockholt.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Cop</span> = a top or head, German kopf. Our Copt
-Point.</p>
-<p><span class="sc">Cumb</span>, or comb = a hollow in a hillside, or a
-narrow valley. So Ulcombe. A word borrowed
-from the Celtic.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Dell</span> = low ground or valley. Hence Deal.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">&#274;&#257;</span> = water, river. So Stur-ea, now Sturry,
-or watery land. So probably Romney, from
-Ruimea. But ey also is &#299;&#275;g, or &#275;g = an island.
-Sceapige, now Isle of Sheppey.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Denu</span> is a valley, and denn a retreat, but these
-often interchange in early forms with dun, which
-survives in our downs, and Down, the village.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Ford.</span>&mdash;Here we have to distinguish between
-the Saxon ford (a natural place-name when
-bridges as yet were few), and fiord, which is
-purely coastal, and comes from our Norse
-marauders. Thus Ashford and Deptford come
-from quite different words.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Gr&#257;f</span>, in Saxon, is our grove, so that Ashgrove
-is pure Saxon, &AElig;sc-graf.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Heall</span> means a hall, or larger house, and may
-be simply the Latin aula, especially as place-names
-ending in hall are more frequent near
-Roman centres. But there is also halk, a corner
-or angle, which may suit other places. Our
-several Whitehalls would indicate the former
-word.</p>
-<p class="tb">The Saxon <span class="smaller">HEATH</span> survives unaltered in some
-cases, and also as Hoath, and perhaps as Hoth
-in Hothfield.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_31">31</div>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Hlinc</span>, a slope, accounts for the Linch and
-Linchfield in Detling, a cultivated slope at the
-foot of the Downs. More common in Sussex.
-Golfers will recognise the word.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">H&#333;h</span> = a hough or heel of land, whence our
-Hundred of Hoo.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Hyrcg</span> is our ridge, and names Eridge, and
-Colbridge, and Sundridge.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Hyll</span> = our hill, partly names many places,
-Bosehill, Hinxhill, Maze Hill, Ide Hill, etc.; but
-I think there are more in Sussex, where Roberts
-enumerates forty-eight.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Mersc</span> = march&mdash;whence Stodmarsh, Burmarsh,
-Mersham, Westmarsh, Marshton.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Ofer</span> and <span class="sc">Ora</span> are difficult to distinguish in use,
-the former meaning bank or shore and the latter
-bank of a stream. Bilnor and Oare may come
-from the former, and Bicknor and Denover (on
-the Beult) from the latter.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Ell</span>, <span class="smaller">WIELL</span>, <span class="smaller">WYLL</span>, as a prefix, becomes our
-well.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Wudu</span> = wood. So Saltwood is Sautwud in
-1230.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Beorg</span> = a hill, dative beorge, is easily confused
-with <span class="sc">Burg</span> = bush, dative byrg, a fortified
-place, and then a city. From the former we get
-our modern beogh, ber or barrow; from the
-latter our prefix Bur, and the suffixes borough,
-burg, boro, and bury. The first syllable of
-Bearsted may be either Beorg or Beorc, birch.
-Canterbury is the burg or fortified city of the
-Cantwara or Kent-folk.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Hlu</span> = a burial mound, developing later into
-the suffix low, lane, and lew, may be found in
-Hadlow, and perhaps in the Hundreds of
-Ryngelo and Cornilo in the Lathe of Borowart
-(now S. Augustine&rsquo;s).</p>
-<p class="tb">Considering the mainly forestal character of
-Saxon Kent, it is not strange that many places
-<span class="pb" id="Page_32">32</span>
-are named from trees. Thus Ac = oak, appears
-in Ockholt, Ackhanger, Ockley. &AElig;sc in Ashford,
-Ashhurst, and several Ashes. Our Nursted
-was Nutstede earlier. Perhaps to Ac also we
-may refer Hocker&rsquo;s Lane in Detling as a prefix
-to another Saxon word, ofer, a shore or bring,
-though it may also be but a corruption of Oakham.
-In numerous place-names, especially those
-derived from trees, we find this suffix: Oakover
-(in Derbyshire), Ashover, Haselover, Birchover,
-commonly shortened into Oaker, Asher, Hasler,
-and Bircher. So the lane near the oak-tree or
-oak-wood would be Oakover Lane, Oaker or
-Ocker Lane, and eventually Hocker&rsquo;s Lane.
-With but one cottage in it, I can find no tradition
-or trace of any personal name from which
-it might be called.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Apuldor</span>, as for appletree, remains in Appledore;
-Birce or beorc, perhaps in Bearsted, Birchington (?),
-Bekehurst.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Box</span>, or byxe (derived from the Latin buxus)
-names many places, and early forms in Bex,
-Bix, Bux, are found both as to Boxley and
-Bexley, as with Boxhill and Bexhill in other
-counties.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Holegn</span> = holen, adj. of holly, survives in
-Hollingbourne and Holborough; <span class="sc">Per</span> (pear) in
-Perhamstead; <span class="sc">Cherry</span> in Cheriton; <span class="sc">Plum</span> in
-Plumstead; <span class="sc">Elm</span> in Elmley, Elmstone, Elmstead,
-but only the wych-elm was indigenous,
-and called Wice by the Saxons. <span class="sc">Thorn</span> we find
-in Thornham.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Haga</span>, a Saxon name survives in our <span class="sc">Haw</span>thorn,
-and may help us to understand the meaning
-of Eythorne, near Dover, and the Hundred
-of Eyhorne, in which Detling is situated. The
-early name of Eythorne is Hegythorne, <i>i.e.</i>, Hawthorn,
-and the Hundred of Eythorde or Eyhorne
-(so from 1347 A.D.) might well be the same,
-and named from the hamlet of Iron Street is
-<span class="pb" id="Page_33">33</span>
-Hollingbourne, where Iron is plainly a late corruption
-of an old word.</p>
-<p class="tb">The Rev. E. McClure, in his <i>British Place-Names</i>,
-gives (p. 207 <i>et seqq.</i>) a list of words in
-old Saxon glossaries, ranging from the 7th to
-the 9th centuries, which appear in British place-names.
-I extract those which seem to apply to
-place-names in Kent.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Bodan</span> = bottom, common in Kent for a
-narrow valley, <i>e.g.</i>, East Bottom at Kingsdown,
-near Walmer.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">H&oelig;gu-thorn</span> = hedge-thorn, hawthorn, whence
-our Eythorne (anciently Hegythe Thorne), Hundred
-of Eyhorne (Haythorn, temp. Henry III.),
-and Iron Street, a hamlet in Hollingbourne in
-that Hundred.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Mapuldur</span> = maple-tree, in our Maplescombe,
-<i>i.e.</i>, the bowl-shaped valley where maples
-abound.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Holegn</span> = holly. Our Hollingbourne, and perhaps
-Hollandon.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Holt-hona</span> = woodcock, or more exactly woodhen,
-like moorhen. Worhona is Saxon for
-pheasant. So our Henhurst, Henwood, and
-Hengrove are the same.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Boece</span> = beech. So our Mark Beech and
-Bough Beech, near Chiddingstone. This derivation
-is also one of those suggested for Bearsted,
-whereof the Saxon name is Beorhham-stede, and
-the first syllable would be either Beorg-hill or
-Beorc-beech.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Goss</span> = furze. Gorsley Wood, in Bishopsbourne.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Fleota</span> = estuary or creek. Our Northfleet,
-Southfleet, Ebbsfleet, and Mearesflete, and
-Flete.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Haesl</span> = hazel. Hazelwood Hill, in Boughton
-Malherbe.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_34">34</div>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Beber</span> = beaver. Beavers flourished in England
-even in historical times, and gave their
-name to Beverley, Beaverbrook, etc. May
-Beaver, near Ashford, derive thus? And the
-Beverley at Canterbury?</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Pearroc</span> = literally a grating&mdash;a place fenced
-in for deer, etc. So Park and Paddock. Paddock
-Wood.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Hreed</span> = reed. Our Reedham possibly; but it
-is not on marshy ground.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Hythae</span> = a harbour. Our Hythe, Greenhythe,
-New Hythe (East Malling), Small Hythe (Tenterden),
-West Hythe, and Erith (Erehithe&mdash;the
-old landing-place for Lesnes Abbey on the
-Thames).</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Thyrne</span> = thorn. Our Thornham.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Cisil</span> = gravel. Our Chislehurst (Cyselhurst
-in 973), or gravelly wood.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Cnol</span> = hill-top, as in Knowle, Knowle Hill (in
-Boughton Malherbe), and Knowlton.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Beyr</span> = shed, cottage. Dr. Sweet makes it the
-same as Bur (modern Bower). Hence perhaps
-our Burham and Burmarsh; but the old forms
-of Burham would point rather to Borow or
-Borough&mdash;the walled settlement.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Aesc</span> = ash. Our Ash, Ashenden, Ashford,
-Ashley, and Ashurst.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Hlep</span> = leap. Hence Hartlip, of old Hertelepe.
-There are two places thus named.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Pirge</span> = pear tree. Possibly Perrywood and
-Perry Street. And Perhamstede according to
-authorities.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Plum-treu</span> = plum tree. Hence Plumstead&mdash;and
-Plumpton?</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Faerh</span> = a young pig, whence our word
-&ldquo;farrow.&rdquo; Considering that the rearing of swine
-was the chief occupation in the dens, I wonder
-that no one has suggested this word for the first
-syllable of Farleigh and Fairlight.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_35">35</div>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Brycg</span> = bridge. The Saxon had the word, but
-not many bridges. Most of our eleven place-names
-in Kent containing this word are of post-Saxon
-date, while we have fifteen &ldquo;fords.&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Sae</span> = sea. So our Seasalter and Seabrook.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Aac</span> = oak. We have Ackholt, Acol, Acryse,
-Oakhurst, Oakley, and Ockholt (now Knockholt).</p>
-<p><span class="sc">Elm</span>, borrowed from the Latin Ulmus. The
-Witch-elm, called Wice in Saxon, is indigenous,
-the other elm imported. We have Elmley, Elmstead,
-and Elmstone.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Mistel</span> = mistletoe (ta. fem.&mdash;tdig) may
-appear in Mistleham, near Appledore.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Caelf</span> = calf. The Saxon name for Challock
-was Caelf-loca-n, <i>i.e.</i>, enclosed place for calves.
-The second syllable suggests the Latin locus, but
-is the source of our English Lock, <i>i.e.</i>, shut up.
-So the locks on the river; and pounds for straying
-cattle are &ldquo;lokes&rdquo; in East Anglia.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Pleg-huses</span> = theatres (or recreation grounds).
-Our Plaistow and Plaxtol.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Syla</span> = wallowing place. So our numerous
-Soles, which I later enumerate.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Dimhus</span> and <span class="sc">Dimhof</span> = hiding or dark place.
-Our Dymchurch are instances.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Crocc</span> and <span class="sc">Hweras</span> are both Saxon for pots.
-Few know what pure Saxon they use when they
-talk of crockery-ware. Pottery was always a
-great industry from Sittingbourne to Sheppey,
-and the Romans appreciated and extended it.
-This may account for our Crokham Hill, Crockham,
-Crockhurst Street, and Crockshard.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Cocca</span>, gen. plural = chickens. Cock St.,
-Cockham Wood, Cockshill, Coxheath, Cockadam
-Shaw, while in Detling we have Cock-hill, Upper
-and Lower Cox Street. Some may, of course,
-be modern and personal names; but I cannot so
-trace them.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_36">36</div>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Boley Hill</span>, near Rochester, was undoubtedly
-a place of civic importance in very early days. It
-was a Danish meeting place corresponding to
-our shire-mote at Pennington Heath, and we
-may best trace its name to a Danish word which
-we still use&mdash;the bole of a tree. This is found in
-various parts of the Danish district of Lincolnshire,
-and the reference may be to the hill with
-a famous tree under which the court of the community
-was held. Trees, as well as cromlechs
-or great stones, were common landmarks in
-Saxon times&mdash;hence our various Stones in Kent.
-Others, however, consider it a corruption of
-Beaulieu, a name given by the Templars to the
-sites of their preceptories, and they instance a
-Boley or Bully Mead in East London, which
-belonged to the Templars. And others, because
-of its ancient legal associations, think it should
-be Bailey Hill, and refer us to the Old Bailey in
-London.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Farleigh.</span>&mdash;On a clear day from Detling Hill we
-can see, not only Farleigh, near Maidstone, but
-Fairlight Church, near Hastings. In Saxon days
-and documents these place-names were the same,
-and so in Domesday (1086), each is Ferlega, the
-passage or fareing through the pastures or leys,
-just as our modern Throwley is Trulega, with
-the scribes&rsquo; variations in 12th century deeds of
-Thruleghe, Trulleda, Trulea, Thrulege, and
-Trudlege. Fairlight, therefore, is simply a
-modern corruption after a fashion which once
-corrupted the name of Leigh, near Tonbridge,
-which I find written Legh in 1435, Ligth in 1513,
-Lyghe in 1525, and Lyght in 1531. It has been
-suggested that the first syllable may indicate a
-personal name, F&aelig;r; but this seems less tenable.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Borstall</span>, from the Anglo-Saxon Beorg, a
-hill, and stal, a dwelling (as in Tunstall), means
-a path up a steep hill. So there is Borstall Hill
-near Rochester, Bostall Hill near Woolwich, and
-Borstall Hill by Whitstable. And I have noted
-<span class="pb" id="Page_37">37</span>
-a passage in White&rsquo;s <i>Selborne</i>&mdash;he made a path
-up the wooded steep hill near his vicarage called
-the Hanger, and he writes: &ldquo;Now the leaf is
-down, the Bostall discovers itself in a faint, delicate
-line running up the Hanger.&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Eastry.</span>&mdash;Lambarde thought this village was
-so named to distinguish it from West-Rye, now
-called simply Rye, but the places are too far
-apart, especially when the great forest of
-Anderida came between them. McClure, our
-most recent authority on British place-names,
-would refer it to the Rugii, a Continental clan
-from the Island of Rugen in the Baltic, whom
-he finds represented in S&ucirc;thryge (Surrey). So
-he would make the word East-ryge, and in a
-charter of 780 it is Eastrygena, and in another
-Eastryge. But amongst the various early spellings
-is Eastereye, <i>i.e.</i>, E&aacute;storegg (No, not Easter
-Egg!), the island of E&aacute;stor. In a will of 929,
-&ldquo;&AElig;thelnoth, the reeve to Eastorege,&rdquo; is mentioned.
-Now the next parish is Woodnesborough,
-the town of Woden, the Saxon god. So here
-may well be, named at the same time and by the
-same people, the name of E&aacute;stor, the goddess of
-spring; while, as to its suffix, the centre of the
-village stands higher than the rest, and is almost
-entirely surrounded by a valley, though not now
-by water. Fewer greater authorities than Professor
-Skeat are to be found, and he inclines to
-this interpretation.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Folkestone.</span>&mdash;Here we find several interpretations,
-the more modern being the most absurd.
-Thus Phillipott suggests the town full of folk!
-and Murray&rsquo;s Handbook to Kent Fulke&rsquo;s Town
-(whoever this Fulke may have been)! Both,
-however, forgot that the final syllable is always
-stane or stone, and not ton. Another imaginative
-worthy says that its stone quarries were much
-used in the 13th and 14th centuries, and belonged
-to the community, and so it was the Folks&rsquo;
-Stone! Folcland we know; Folcmote we know;
-<span class="pb" id="Page_38">38</span>
-but what is this? The <i>Anglo Saxon Chronicle</i>
-says that Harold seized ships at Folcesstane, and
-in Domesday it appears as Falchestan. Harris
-simply Latinizes the name and calls it Lapis
-populi, the stone of the people, and as in Ninnius
-(8th cent.) there is a reference in his description
-of England to the &ldquo;stone of inscription on the
-Gallic sea,&rdquo; which some would identify with
-Folkestone; he may be more right than he knew.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Plaxtol</span>, near Sevenoaks.&mdash;In many Kentish
-parishes (and elsewhere) the name Pleystole or
-Playstool clings to a piece of land on which
-miracle and other plays were acted when amusements
-had to be mainly home-grown. So at
-Lynsted, Herbert Finch, in the sixth year of
-Queen Elizabeth, bequeathed the &ldquo;Playstall et
-Playstollcroft&rdquo; fields. A variant of the name we
-may find in Plaistow, by Bromley. So in Selborne
-(Gilbert White&rsquo;s renowned village) the
-Plestor is the old playground. Would that in all
-villages, especially since the looting of old commons,
-there might be a field thus consecrated to
-healthy recreation.</p>
-<p class="tb">Amongst the sources of enlightenment as to
-the meaning of our place-names I have turned to
-the volume of the English Dialect Society, which
-is on the <i>Kentish Dialect and Provincialisms</i>,
-and was prepared by the Revs. W. D. Parish
-and W. F. Shaw. It does not contain, as I have
-found, nearly all our local words, and not a few
-of the words it does give are by any means
-peculiar to Kent. Still, it is useful and interesting,
-and it may well be that some of our Kent
-place-names are almost peculiar to Kent, especially
-as the neighbouring counties of Sussex and
-Essex were populated by Saxons, but Kent was
-populated by the Jutes, and no doubt their
-common tongue had its tribal variations. I take
-from this dictionary all the words which are
-illustrative of place-names.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_39">39</div>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Forstall</span> = &ldquo;a farm-yard before a house; a
-paddock near a farm house; or the farm buildings....
-As a local name, Forestalls seem to
-have abounded in Kent.&rdquo; Two instances are
-given; but I have noted Broken Forestall, Buckley;
-Clare&rsquo;s Forestall, Throwley; Mersham
-Forstall; Forstall Farm, Egerton; The Forstall,
-Hunton; Preston Forstall, Wingham; Painter&rsquo;s
-Forestall, Ospringe; Hunter&rsquo;s Forstall, Herne;
-Fostal, Herne Hill; Forstall, Lenham; Forstall,
-Aylesford; Shepherd&rsquo;s Forstall, Sheldwich&mdash;and
-no doubt there are more.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Tye.</span>&mdash;&ldquo;An extensive common pasture, such as
-Waldershare Tie and Old Wives&rsquo; Lees Tie, and
-in a document of 1510, a croft called Wolves&rsquo;
-Tie.&rdquo; I would add the places called Olantigh,
-one near Wye and another near Fordwich. Teig-r
-is really a Norse word meaning a piece of grassland,
-and when borrowed or used by the Saxons
-it became Tigar, Tig and Tey in such place-names
-as Mark&rsquo;s Tey.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Yokelet.</span>&mdash;&ldquo;An old name in Kent for a little
-farm or manor.&rdquo; Cake&rsquo;s Yoke is the name of a
-farm in Crundale. The yoke was a measure of
-land, probably such as one yoke of oxen could
-plough. Thus it corresponds to the Latin jugum,
-which means a yoke, and also a land measure.
-We have also West Yoke in Ash-next-Ridley;
-Yoklet, a borough in Waltham; land so named
-in Saltwood; and Ickham was of old Yeckham
-or Ioccham, from the A.S. yeok, a yoke of arable
-land. Iocclet is also given in the dictionary as
-a Kenticism for a small farm.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Bodge.</span>&mdash;&ldquo;A measure of corn, about a bushel.&rdquo;
-May this suggest a derivation for Bodgebury,
-some land with a cottage thereon, part of the old
-glebe of Detling?</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Brent.</span>&mdash;&ldquo;The Middle-English word Brent
-most commonly meant burnt; but there was
-another Brent, an adjective which signified
-steep.&rdquo; Thus Brentwood in Essex is the same
-<span class="pb" id="Page_40">40</span>
-as Burnt Wood in Detling, but the Brents or
-North Preston near Faversham, and the Brent
-Gate therein refer to the steep contour of the
-land. A Celtic root, found in Welsh as bryn, a
-ridge, accounts for many such names as Brendon
-Hill, Birwood Forest, Brandon, a ridge in Essex,
-Breandown near Weston-super-Mare, and many
-Swiss and German names for steep places.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Court</span>, or Court Lodge.&mdash;&ldquo;The manor house,
-where the court leet of the manor is held.&rdquo; So
-in Detling we have East Court and West Court
-because, in default of a son, the old manor was
-divided between two co-heiresses in the 16th
-century. So we have as place-names North
-Court in Eastling, a Court at Street in Lympne,
-besides very many names of old houses, such as
-Eastry Court, Selling Court, etc.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Down.</span>&mdash;&ldquo;A piece of high open ground, not
-peculiar to Kent, but perhaps more used here
-than elsewhere. Thus we have Updown in
-Eastry, Hartsdown and Northdown in Thanet,
-Leysdown in Sheppey, and Barham Downs.&rdquo; I
-may add Puttock&rsquo;s Down (the Kite&rsquo;s Down),
-three villages called Kingsdown, Derry Downs,
-Downe, Hackemdown, Harble Down, Housedown,
-Kilndown, two Underdowns, besides probably
-some of the names ending in don. The
-Celtic dun, a hill-fortress, found all over Europe,
-is directly found in our Croydon, as in London,
-Dunstable, etc., and the Saxon extended its use,
-especially in the plural, to high ground, whether
-crowned with a fort or camp or not. Trevisa
-wrote in 1398 &ldquo;A downe is a lytel swellynge or
-aresynge (arising) of erthe passynge the playne
-ground ... and not retchyng to hyghnesse of
-an hylle.&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Fright</span> or Frith.&mdash;&ldquo;A thin, scrubby wood.&rdquo;
-So the Fright Woods near Bedgebury. And I
-learned to skate as a boy at the Fright Farm on
-Dover Castle Hill. This may account for Frith
-by Newnham, and possibly also for Frittenden.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_41">41</div>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Polder.</span>&mdash;&ldquo;A marsh: a piece of boggy soil.&rdquo;
-A place in Eastry now called Felder land was of
-old Polder land, and nearer Sandwich is a place
-still called Polders. Poll (Celtic), Pool (Early
-English), Proll (Welsh), is a common prefix to
-the name of a brook. Polhill, however, in Harrietsham,
-is more likely to come from the great
-Kent family of the Polhills. So we have Polhill
-Farm in Detling, and a Polhill was Vicar in
-1779.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Rough.</span>&mdash;&ldquo;A small wood; any rough, woody
-place.&rdquo; So Bushy Rough in the Alkham Valley,
-where rises one of the sources of the river Dour.
-Hence also Rough Hills in Hernhill; Rough
-Common near Canterbury; and perhaps Roughway
-in Plaxtol, the wood being used in the
-Kentish rather than the usual sense.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Saltings</span>, or Salterns, or Salts.&mdash;&ldquo;Salt
-marshes on the sea-side of the sea-walls.&rdquo; A
-North Kent word, naming Saltbox, and Salterns,
-both in Sheppey, and probably Seasalter near
-Whitstable. We must find, however, if we can,
-another derivation for Saltwood Castle.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Selynge.</span>&mdash;Toll, custom, tribute. The Prior
-of Christ Church, Canterbury, used to take in
-the Stoure a certain custom, which was called
-Selynge, of every little boat which came to an
-anchor before the mouth of the said Flete. The
-compilers of the Dictionary say: &ldquo;The parish of
-Sellindge, near Hythe, probably takes its name
-from some such ancient payment.&rdquo; Is it possible
-that the old name of Sentlynge, given to S.
-Mary&rsquo;s Cray in Domesday Book, may point to
-another place of tolling craft on the Cray?</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_42">42</div>
-<h2 id="c6"><span class="small"><span class="sc">The Northmen in Kent.</span></span></h2>
-<p>A <i>Furore Normanorum</i> was a petition
-in an old litany in England before it
-had gained that name. And with reason,
-for the success of Angles, Jutes and Saxons in
-the conquest of England drew the attention of
-Scandinavian and other Vikings, who found that
-booty could be gained by rapid raids. It was at
-the end of the eighth century that the Danes (as
-they came to be called, although the wider
-&ldquo;Northmen&rdquo; would be a better term), reached
-the land of the Angles, coming from Norway to
-Dorset, and generally harrying the eastern and
-southern coasts for a couple of hundred years.
-They also remained and settled, mainly to the
-north of the Humber, until at last the greater
-part of England came under their power, and
-in 1016 Cnut became the Danish King of England.</p>
-<p>Our forefathers in Kent should have our sympathy
-for the continuous state of alarm in which
-they were kept. In 832 Scandinavian pirates
-ravaged Sheppey. In 838 they won a battle in
-Merscware (<i>i.e.</i>, the land of the Marsh-folk, <i>i.e.</i>,
-Romney Marsh), and slew many in Canterbury.
-In 851 nine of their piratical ships were taken in
-battle at Londovic (Sandwich) by &AElig;thelstan, the
-under-king of Kent; but they remained to winter
-in Thanet for the first time, and in the same year
-350 of their ships entered the Thames and took
-both Cantwaraburg and Lundenburg (London).
-In 853 the men of Kent, under the Alderman
-Ealchere, with the men of Surrey, fought in
-Tenet (Thanet), but were worsted. Next year
-they wintered in Sceap-ige (Sheppey). In 865 the
-men of Kent tried to buy off the heathen invaders,
-who, however, ravaged all East Kent.</p>
-<p>Then arose the great man, Alfred, who in 871
-<span class="pb" id="Page_43">43</span>
-had eight battles with the Danes south of the
-Thames. In 885 they besieged Hrofceastre
-(Rochester), but King Alfred relieved it, and
-the Danes took to their ships, having lost all
-their horses. In 893 two hundred and fifty
-Danish ships came to Limenemouth (Lympne),
-took their fleet four miles up the river, and made
-a strong fort at Apuldore, while Hasting with
-80 ships entered the Thames estuary, made a
-fort at Milton, and later one at Sceobyrig (Shoebury).
-In 969 Eadger orders Tenet land to be
-pillaged, and in 980 Thanet is overrun by the
-Danes. In 986 the bishopric of Hrofceastre was
-devastated. In 993 a fleet of nearly four hundred
-ships came to &ldquo;Stone,&rdquo; which may be the one in
-the Isle of Oxney, or another near Faversham
-on the Watling Street, or another on the Swale,
-and went on to Sandwic, which was their chief
-southern haven, and embodies in its name the
-Scandinavian wic or bay (Sandwic is a common
-place-name in Iceland and Norway).</p>
-<p>In 994 Anlaf, King of Norway, and Sweyn,
-King of Denmark, with a fleet of nearly 500,
-failed to take London, but ravaged Kent and
-other counties. In 998 they sailed up the Medway
-estuary to Rochester, and there beat the
-Kentish army. In 1005 a fleet came to Sandwic
-and despoiled the country.</p>
-<p>In 1007 England despaired, and paid a tribute
-of &pound;36,000, while Thurkell&rsquo;s army came to Sandwich
-and thence to Canterbury, where the people
-of East Kent bought peace at the cost of &pound;3,000,
-while the Danes spent the winter in repairing
-their ships. In 1012 they took Canterbury and
-martyred the Archbishop &AElig;lfheah, better known
-to us as S. Alphege. In 1013 Sweyn came again
-to Sandwich; but in 1014 Eadmund (Edmund
-Etheling) attacked the Danes in Kent, drove
-them into Sheppey, and met their leader in battle
-at &AElig;glesforda (Avlesford). But in 1016 Cnut
-(Canute) became King of all England, and to
-him in 1018 &pound;72,000 was paid in tribute.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_44">44</div>
-<p>In 1203 the body of S. Alphege was allowed
-by Cnut to be taken to Canterbury, and England
-remained a Danish province. In 1040 Harda-Cnut
-was brought from Bruges to succeed
-Harold as King, and landed at Sandwich. In
-1046 Thanet was ravaged again by the Northmen;
-but in 1049 King Edward gathered a great
-fleet at Sandwich against Sweyn, and later this
-fleet lay at D&aelig;rentamutha (<i>i.e.</i>, Darentmouth,
-<i>i.e.</i> Dartford). In 1051 King Edward&rsquo;s brother-in-law,
-Eustace, lost some followers in a fracas
-at Dofra (Dover).</p>
-<p>But a great change was imminent, and England
-was to change one domination for another,
-and in 1052 Wilhelm (afterwards the Conqueror)
-visited King Edward the Confessor (or Saint)
-with a great host of Normans, and he exiled
-Earl Godwin, who came from Bruges to N&oelig;sse
-(Dungeness) was driven back. Returning with
-his son Harold to Dungeness, they took all the
-ships they could find at Rumenea (Romney),
-Heda (Hythe), and Folcesstane. Thence to
-Dofra and Sandwich, ending up with ravaging
-Sheppey and Middeltun (Milton, near Sittingbourne).
-Then, in 1066, Harold dies in battle at
-Hastings, and William begins our Norman
-dynasty, Northmen being succeeded by
-Normans.</p>
-<p>Traces of the visits to Kent are found in
-various place-names, though more common in
-other parts of Britain, and indeed in other
-countries, since as marauders, colonists, or conquerors
-they were for three centuries the terror
-of Europe, from Iceland to Italy. The many
-places with the suffixes byr or by, thorpe, throp,
-or trop, toft, thwaite, ville in Normandy, or well
-and will in England, garth, beck, haugh, with,
-tarn, dale, force, fell, are all almost exclusively
-northern to Kent and mainly Norwegian. As to
-&ldquo;by&rdquo; for town, there are 600 north of the
-Thames and east of Watling Street, and hardly
-any in the south. The one apparent exception in
-<span class="pb" id="Page_45">45</span>
-Kent&mdash;Horton Kirkby&mdash;is no exception, for it
-was simply Horton until the time of Edward the
-First, when Roger de Kirkby, <i>from Lancashire</i>,
-married a Kentish heiress and the manor and
-place were re-named after him.</p>
-<p>We have, however, certain records of their
-piratical visits, as at Deptford and Fordwich,
-where the termination is not the Anglo-Saxon
-ford, meaning a passage across a river, but the
-Norse fiord, a roadstead for ships. Deptford is the
-deep fiord, where ships could anchor close to
-the bank, and Fordwich, the smallest &ldquo;limb&rdquo; of
-the Cinque Ports, was once the port of Canterbury
-on the Stour, and gives us wic, the Norse
-for station for ships, a small creek or bay. So,
-in Kent, we have also from the same source
-Wick in Romney Marsh, Greenwich, Woolwich,
-and Sandwich. Inland, however, Wich or Wick,
-is an Anglo-Saxon borrowing from the Latin
-vicus, and means houses or a village.</p>
-<p>Another Norse word in Kent is Ness or Naze,
-a nose or promontory, such as Dungeness, Shoeburyness,
-Pepperness, Foulness, Shellness,
-Sheerness, Sharpness Cliff at Dover, whence
-criminals were hurled, Whiteness, Foreness,
-Bartlett Ness and Oakham Ness. The Nore, in
-Kent, is the Norse, or perhaps Jutish, N&ocirc;r, a
-bay with a narrow entrance, and the word is
-unique in Britain, unless we may find it also in
-Normarsh, near Rainham. Again attributable to
-our invaders, and again purely coastal, are the
-places ending in <i>fliot</i>, a small river or creek, such
-as Northfleet, Southfleet, Ebbsfleet, with Purfleet
-on the opposite bank of the Thames. Thanet
-and Sheppey were for us their chief points of
-attack and their naval stations, while the Danelagh
-or Kingdom whence the Norse element predominated
-had the Wash as the chief entrance
-whence they radiated out.</p>
-<p>The suffix &ldquo;gate&rdquo; may be either from the
-Saxon geat or the Scandinavian gata, but when
-<span class="pb" id="Page_46">46</span>
-we find Ramsgate, Dargate, Margate, Westgate,
-Kingsgate, Snargate, and Sandgate, all
-on the coast, while in Romney Marsh &ldquo;gut&rdquo;
-takes the place of &ldquo;gate,&rdquo; as in Jervis Kut,
-Clobesden Gut, and Denge Marsh Gut, we may
-incline to a Scandinavian origin.</p>
-<p>It is in the north, and the north only according
-to the best authorities, that the suffix ing represents
-the Norse <i>eng</i> for grass-land.</p>
-<h2 id="c7"><span class="small"><span class="sc">The Islands of Kent.</span></span></h2>
-<p>Most islands are attached portions of the
-nearest mainland, severed in prehistoric
-times by subsidence of the intervening
-soil and the action of strong currents. Thus
-even England is a portion of the Continent, as
-its fauna and flora proclaim, while Ireland was
-severed earlier still. Thus also the Isle of Wight
-is Hampshire. So our Kentish islands, now only
-two and neither now to be effectually circumnavigated,
-are practically absorbed in the mainland.
-&ldquo;Sheppey, Thanet&mdash;what else?&rdquo; most
-would say. Yet the early geographer Nennius,
-writing in the eighth century, has the following
-quaint passage:&mdash;&ldquo;The first marvel is the Lommon
-Marsh&rdquo; (<i>i.e.</i>, Limen, now Romney), &ldquo;for
-in it are 340 islands with men and women living
-on them. It is girt by 340 rocks, and in every
-rock is an eagle&rsquo;s nest, and 340 rivers run into
-it, and there goes out of it into the sea but one
-river, which is called the Lemn.&rdquo; Truly a picturesque
-account of the numerous spots, where
-dry land first appeared in the shallow bay, and
-the countless sluices which intersected them.</p>
-<p class="tb">&ldquo;<span class="sc">Romney</span>&rdquo; is probably formed by the addition
-of the Saxon Ige, By, or Ea&mdash;island, to the
-earlier Celtic Ruim&mdash;marsh, and so gives an
-idea of what the district was before the Romans
-<span class="pb" id="Page_47">47</span>
-reclaimed much by building their great Rhee
-Wall. Certain names in Romney Marsh preserved
-the same history. <span class="sc">Oxeney</span> (still we have
-the Island and the Hundred of Oxney, containing
-Wittersham and Stone parishes) is even now
-insulated by two branches of the Rother, and
-here, in the ancient and now diverted channel,
-was found in 1824 an oaken ship buried deep in
-sand and mud. Its name is said to mean the isle
-of the fat beeves. On pagan altars discovered
-there oxen were carved, and still it is a great
-cattle-raising district. We should look now in
-vain for the three ferries by which it was
-once entered. In its centre is <span class="sc">Ebony</span>, no doubt
-originally a sort of island, once called &ldquo;Ebeney
-in Oxney,&rdquo; and in an early document it appears
-as Hibbene. It has been suggested that the first
-part of the word is the old Celtic Avon, <i>i.e.</i>,
-water or river, and I find that a Saxon charter
-of 793 A.D. calls the Gloucester Avon by the
-name of Aben. The third syllable is, of course,
-the Saxon word for island. Scotney Court, Lydd,
-and Scotney Castle, Lamberhurst, no doubt
-preserve the name of the Barons de Scotini, who
-came from Scotigny in North France, and possessed,
-in the 12th century, much land, which
-they held until the reign of Edward the Third,
-while Scot&rsquo;s Hall, near Smeeth, was the seat of
-Knights of that name down to the time of the
-Armada. But for this history one might have
-classed Scotney with Oxney and Ebony.</p>
-<p class="tb">Coming now to <span class="sc">Sheppey</span>, still an island,
-washed on the north by the estuary of the
-Thames, on the west by that of the Medway, and
-insulated by the Swale (Saxon Suala), crossed
-by a railway bridge and two ferries, the Celtic
-name is said to have been Malata, from Mohlt,
-a sheep, which the Saxon conquerors translated
-into Sceap-ige, Sheep Isle. It includes <span class="sc">Elmley</span>
-and <span class="sc">Harty</span>, once its little islands, and now
-peninsulas. An old name for Harty was Hertai,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_48">48</span>
-in which we may perhaps find the Saxon Heorat&mdash;stag,
-hart&mdash;as in Hartlip and Hartbourne, and
-ea&mdash;island. And Elmley, which island would
-simply denote the ley or glade in the forest in
-which elms were frequent, might here be Elm-isle.
-And another islet was <span class="sc">Graven-ea</span>, the grain
-island, on the opposite side of the Swale, now in
-the Faversham marshes.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Thanet</span>, the best known and most important
-island, was in the 5th century separated from the
-mainland by the Wantsum and the estuary of the
-Stour, which gave an expanse of water mainly
-two miles broad, so that vessels from or to London
-sailed from Reculver to Richborough, and
-avoided the longer and rougher route round the
-North Foreland. To guard this sea-way the
-Romans had placed their forts of Regulbium
-(Reculver) and Rutupia (Richborough) at its
-northern and eastern entrance. Now, and for
-long, by the dwindling of the Stour and the practical
-extinction of the Wantsum, Thanet is but
-in name an island. Even writing in 1570, Lambarde
-calls it a peninsula. It is said that its
-Celtic name was Rimn&mdash;a headland, and that
-its later Saxon name, Tenet, means a beacon.
-Solinus, who wrote about A.D. 80, calls it Ad-Tanatos
-(Thanatos, Greek for Death, because its
-soil killed snakes even when exported for that
-purpose!). Nennius, in the 8th century, says
-Guorthigern handed to Hengist and Horsa the
-island, &ldquo;which in their language is called Tenet,
-but in British speech Ruoihm,&rdquo; or Ru-oichim.
-In a charter of 679 it appears as Tenid. The
-name, says McClure, may involve the Celtic
-Tann for oaks, as in Glastenec, an early form of
-Glastonbury, surviving in the English, Tanner,
-Tanyard, etc. From this root is derived the
-Breton place-name Tannouet. Tenid is its oldest
-Saxon form, and the <i>Saxon Chronicle</i> records
-that in 969 Eadgar ordered Tenetland to be
-pillaged.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_49">49</div>
-<h2 id="c8"><span class="small"><span class="sc">Variations in the Spelling of Place-Names.</span></span></h2>
-<p>In the search for the meaning of a place-name
-it is necessary to go back as far as possible
-and discover, if we can, its earliest form.
-The <i>Anglo Saxon Chronicle</i>, and the later
-Domesday Book of 1086; the gradual blending
-of Saxon and Norman into the English tongue;
-and then the invention of printing; all may have
-had an effect on the pronunciation, and so the
-spelling, of a word. Also there is the tendency
-to shorten a long word, as when Pepingeberia
-becomes Pembury, or Godwinston, through
-Gusseton, becomes Guston. And before the
-standardization of spelling which printing to a
-great extent effected, and in written documents
-such as charters or wills, the most remarkable
-variations will occur according to personal varieties
-of pronunciation. Even now, though every
-one reads &ldquo;I am going,&rdquo; in one county you may
-hear &ldquo;I&rsquo;m a gowin&rsquo;,&rdquo; in another &ldquo;I be gooin&rsquo;,&rdquo;
-in another &ldquo;I be gwaine,&rdquo; and so forth, and so
-one wonders less at the various forms in which
-a name appears in writing in Saxon, in Norman,
-or in Early English days.</p>
-<p>As a general rule the earliest form will be
-best and most likely to indicate why a name was
-given. To illustrate this source, both of information
-and of error, let me take two Kentish
-place-names&mdash;Westenhanger and Tenterden&mdash;giving
-the dates at which I find the various
-forms.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Westenhanger.</span>&mdash;There is a Teutonic stem
-hanh which means to hang, with the Anglo-Saxon
-later forms, H&ocirc;n, H&ecirc;ng, from which we
-get our place names of hanger, Ongar, etc. A
-hanger is a wood or copse hanging on the side
-of a hill, and in Kent we find Betteshanger,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_50">50</span>
-Hangherst, and Ackhanger, as well as Westenhanger,
-concerning which Leland in his Itinerary
-writes of &ldquo;Ostinhaungre ... of sum now corruptly
-called Westenanger.&rdquo; I find it spelled
-Ostrynghangre in 1274 and 1291, Westynghangre
-in 1343, Westingangre in 1346, Ostrynhangre
-in 1376 and 1381, Estynghangre in 1383,
-Westynganger in 1385, Ostynhangre in 1409,
-Ostrynghanger in 1468, Westinganger in 1472,
-Ostrynhanger in 1478, Westynghanger in 1511,
-Westhanger in 1519, and Oystenhanger in 1541.
-The changes of the first syllable illustrate the
-continuance of the Saxon W&oelig;st and the Norman
-Ouest until there is the reversion to the Saxon
-form in our West.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Tenterden</span>, again, has a long list of variants.
-Probably its Saxon name indicated the place
-where the Theinwarden, or Thane&rsquo;s Warden or
-Guardian, looked after the rights and dues of
-various other dens where his swine had pannage
-and his tenants tended them. It is not mentioned
-in Domesday, as not of sufficient importance or
-taxability; but in 1190 I find it as Tentwarden,
-in 1252 as Thendwardenne and Tentwardenn, in
-1255 as Tentwardene&mdash;this early and probably
-original form cropping up at intervals for another
-three hundred years. But in 1259 we get nearer
-to the extant form, as Tendyrdenn. In 1300
-there is Tenterdenne, and in 1311 Tentredenne.
-From this point I take the spellings from the
-Archbishop&rsquo;s register of the institutions of its
-parish priests, and here the earliest record is
-Tenterdenne in 1311. Thenceforward Tent&rsquo;denne
-and Tant&rsquo;denn in 1322, Tentrdenn in 1327, Tenterdenne
-in 1333, Tentwardene in 1342, Tenterdenne
-in 1346, Tentwardyn in 1390, Tynterden
-in 1394, Tent&rsquo;den in 1404, Tenterden (for the
-first time exactly in its present form) in 1407,
-Tendirden in 1436, Tentwarden at various dates
-from 1464 to 1531, Tentreden in 1501 and 1525,
-Tenterden in 1511, 1523, 1539, and 1546, &ldquo;Tentwarden
-<span class="pb" id="Page_51">51</span>
-alias Tenterden&rdquo; in 1541, Tynterden in
-1546, Tenterden in 1556, Tentwarden in 1560,
-Tenterden in 1571 and 1615, Tentarden in 1619,
-Tendarden in 1626, Tentarden in 1627 and 1636.
-Henceforth it is always Tenterden in the Lambeth
-Registers. These variations are the more
-noticeable as all occurring in one office, where one
-would have expected a settled and continuously
-adopted form, whereas in such documents as
-wills the testator, or even the scrivener who
-wrote the will, would have only the current or
-the personal idea as to the right spelling of a
-name.</p>
-<p class="tb">Elsewhere I have given variations of the places
-we now know as Edenbridge, Cuxton, Shepherdswell,
-Bethersden, Eastry, Throwley, etc. One
-might add the cases of Freondesbyry (Saxon),
-Frandesberie (Domesday), Frenesbery, and
-Frendesbury, for our <span class="sc">Frindsbury</span>; of Estbarbrenge,
-Barmyage, Barmling, Barmelinge, and
-Berblinge, for our <span class="sc">Barming</span>; &AElig;pledure (Saxon),
-Apeldres (Domesday), Apoldre (1381), Apeltre,
-Appledrau, and Appuldre, for our <span class="sc">Appledore</span>;
-of P&oelig;dlewrtha (Saxon), Pellesorde (Domesday),
-and Pallesford, for our three <span class="sc">Paddlesworths</span>;
-Hertlepeshille (temp. Edw. II.), Herclepe, Hertelepe,
-and Harclypp (1534), for our <span class="sc">Hartlip</span>; and
-Ok&rsquo;olte (<i>i.e.</i>, Oak Wood), Ocholte, Sud-Acholt,
-Scottesocholt, and Nokeholde, for our <span class="sc">Knockholt</span>.
-The etymological advantage of going
-back is seen in the case of <span class="sc">Ringwould</span>, which
-becomes more intelligible when down to the time
-of Henry 3rd it was known as Ridelinwalde or
-Rydelynewelde (<i>i.e.</i>, the settlement of the clan
-of Ryddeling by the wood), whereas not till 1476
-do I find Ringeweld, and Ringewold in 1502.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_52">52</div>
-<h2 id="c9"><span class="small"><span class="sc">Ecclesiastical Place-Names.</span></span></h2>
-<p>There are not so many as one would expect
-considering the importance and power and
-the possessions of the Church in Kent.
-Taking some as they occur to me, there are <span class="sc">All
-Hallows</span>, in Sheppey, so named from the dedication
-of its church to All Saints&rsquo;. The Latin
-Sanctus and the Teutonic Helige are the same in
-meaning. So we have, too, in Lower Halstow
-the Saxon helige stow&mdash;the holy place. In a list
-of Jack Cade&rsquo;s Kentish followers, in 1450, the
-parish of Omi Scor is mentioned, which puzzled
-me for a moment until I saw it was a contraction
-for Omnium Sanctorum, All Saints&rsquo;.</p>
-<p class="tb">The two <span class="sc">Minsters</span>, one in Thanet and one in
-Sheppey, both of Saxon foundation, are the
-Latin Monasterium, found later as Moynstre and
-then as Menstre. <span class="sc">Monkton</span>, earlier Moncstun
-and Monkynton, marks a manor given A.D. 961
-by Queen Eadgiva to the monks of the community
-of Holy Trinity, which afterwards became
-the greater Christ Church, Canterbury. There
-are also, for the same reasons, Monks Horton
-and Monks Hill, by Herne Hill, in Blean.
-<span class="sc">Bishopsbourne</span>, earlier Bishopstone, and
-Bishopsdenne, denotes an episcopal manor. The
-old nucleus of <span class="sc">Lydd</span> was Bishopswic, and in
-Domesday <span class="sc">Boughton Malherbe</span> appears as Boltone
-Archiepiscopi. <span class="sc">Preston</span>, near Wingham
-(there is another by Aylesford, and a third near
-Faversham) is Priest&rsquo;s Town, and denotes a
-place where there was a small college of clergy.
-That near Wingham is recorded in Domesday as
-Prestetune, and in a fine of Edward II. we have:
-&ldquo;Preston next Wengham and Wykham
-Brewouse.&rdquo; It belonged to S. Augustine&rsquo;s
-Abbey at Canterbury. <span class="sc">S. Nicholas at Wade</span>
-is named from the dedication of the ancient
-church. At Wade represents the Latin Ad
-<span class="pb" id="Page_53">53</span>
-Vadum, at the ford, over the Wantsum, into
-Thanet, near the existing-bridge at Sarre.</p>
-<p class="tb">S. Margaret&rsquo;s Bay and <span class="sc">S. Margaret&rsquo;s at
-Cliffe</span> retain their Norman dedications. The
-church originally belonged to S. Martin&rsquo;s Priory
-at Dover. <span class="sc">Lillechurch</span> House, near Higham,
-marks the site of the old Priory of Higham. The
-Hundred of Lesnes (A.S. leswes, pastures) is the
-district once attached to the Augustinian Abbey
-(whence the present name of <span class="sc">Abbey Wood</span>)
-founded in 1178 by the Chief Justice and Regent
-Richard de Lucy.</p>
-<p class="tb">Of the five parishes named from the river Cray
-two are named from the patron saints of their
-churches. <span class="sc">S. Mary Cray</span> is, however, called
-Sentlynge in Domesday Book. <span class="sc">S. Paul&rsquo;s Cray</span>
-is a misnomer, since the dedication is to S.
-Paulinus, Bishop of Rochester, and afterwards
-Archbishop of York. So in a deed of 1291 I find
-it as Creypaulin, and in a fine of Edward II.,
-1314, as Paulynescraye. In 1560, however, it
-appears as Powle&rsquo;s Crey.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Brenzett</span>, in Romney Marsh, does not suggest
-in its present form either a Celtic or a Saxon
-origin; but as its old church was dedicated to S.
-Eanswith, a popular Saxon Saint, also commemorated
-in the S. Mary and S. Eanswith of
-the original church at Folkestone, it has been
-suggested that Brenzett has been evolved in process
-of time out of Eanswith. Bresett and Brynsete
-(1416) are variants of the place-name. There
-is also the parish of <span class="sc">S. Mary in the Marsh</span>
-hard by. <span class="sc">Newchurch</span>, also in the Marsh, is
-Neucerce in Domesday (1036), but as there is no
-Norman work in the church, which is of Early
-English architecture, it is supposed that shortly
-before Domesday an older church had been pulled
-down. Then and still it gives its name to the
-Hundred of Newchurch in the Lathe of Limea
-or Limowart, which was re-named Shepway in
-the time of Henry the Third. Also in the Marsh
-<span class="pb" id="Page_54">54</span>
-is <span class="sc">Dymchurch</span>, earlier Demchurche. But earlier
-still it is said to have been called simply Dimhus
-or Dimhof, which would mean in Saxon the
-dark or hiding place; so that &ldquo;church&rdquo; may be
-a later addition to an old name. <span class="sc">Eastchurch</span>,
-in Sheppey, was, and is, the easternmost church
-in the island.</p>
-<h2 id="c10"><span class="small"><span class="sc">Place-Names from Persons.</span></span></h2>
-<p>We have seen how common in Kent are
-place-names derived from patronymics of
-the name of a family or clan, such as
-Kennington, the settlement of the Cennings, but
-there are others, mainly more modern, which
-include the name of an individual, who usually
-would be the lord of the manor. Thus some have
-imagined that <span class="sc">Swingfield</span>, near Dover, is
-Sweyn&rsquo;s Field, as if the Saxons would have
-named a place after their piratical enemy. The
-older forms, Swonesfelde and Swynefelde, would
-more naturally point to swine, the keeping of
-which was the chief pastoral pursuit of the
-Saxons in the dens and clearings of the forest.
-<span class="sc">Queenborough</span>, or Quinborowe, however (earlier
-known as Bynnee), was named by Edward the
-Third (who built a strong fort there) in honour
-of Queen Philippa in 1368. <span class="sc">Rosherville</span> is
-very recent, being named after Jeremiah Rosher,
-lord of the manor in the nineteenth century.
-<span class="sc">Sutton Valence</span> was Town Sutton until 1265,
-when it became part of the possessions of William
-de Valence, half-brother of Henry the
-Third.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Boughton Aluph</span>&mdash;Bocton Anulphi in a charter
-of Edward the Second&mdash;was the seat in the
-time of Henry the Seventh of the family of
-Aloff, to which Wye belonged. <span class="sc">Boughton
-Monchelsea</span> (Bocton Chanesy in the time of
-Edward the Second) owes its additional name to
-<span class="pb" id="Page_55">55</span>
-a Norman noble; and <span class="sc">Boughton Malherbe</span>
-(another Bush-ton, or town in the woods) was
-given as a manor to the Norman family of Malherbe.
-<span class="sc">Bethersden</span> can be traced back to
-Norman times as Beatrichesdenne, probably as
-held by an heiress of that name. So <span class="sc">Patrixbourne</span>
-appears earliest as Bourne until a Patrick
-held the manor. <span class="sc">Capel le Ferne</span>, near Dover,
-was originally Mauregge; but in 1175 the Capel
-family owned Capel&rsquo;s Court in Ivychurch, and
-had estates in several parts of Kent. In the
-fifteenth century it was called sometimes S.
-Mary Marige and sometimes Capelle le farne,
-and in a deed of 1511 it appears as &ldquo;Capelferne
-or S. Mary Merge.&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Shepherdswell</span>, near Dover, has nothing to
-do with a shepherd or a well; but is an early
-corruption of Sibertswalt, as it appears in
-Domesday, <i>i.e.</i>, the wood of Sibert. The phonetic
-changes are found in later charters and wills,
-Sybersysweld in 1474, Sybberdiswold 1484, Shipriswold
-1501, Shepswold 1506, and Sheperterswold
-in 1522. Suabert, or Sieberht, was a great
-Saxon thane, and granted land in Sturgeth
-(Sturry) and Bodesham to St. Domneva&rsquo;s new
-Minster in Thanet, while in a charter of 814 we
-read of Selebertineg-lond. Great Chart was
-originally Selebert&rsquo;s Chart. Sibbertston (or
-Selebertston) was a sub-manor in Chilham, and
-there is still the Hundred of Sebrittenden or
-Selebertsden in what was the old Lathe of Wye.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Mongeham</span> is probably Monyn&rsquo;s Home, for the
-Monins family have been there or near there
-since the time of Henry the Third, and are there
-still. <span class="sc">Goodneston</span>, commonly called Guston, was
-no doubt Godwinston, as in the territory of the
-great Earl Godwin, and we trace its present
-name through the earlier forms Gounceston,
-Goceston, Gusseton, to Guston. Another Goodnestone,
-near Faversham, appears as Gudewynston
-in 1469 and Goodwinston in 1529. The
-<span class="pb" id="Page_56">56</span>
-Breux, of <span class="sc">Wickham Breux</span>, is another Norman
-addition to a Saxon name.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Ebbsfleet</span>, the so important landing place,
-first of Hengist and then of S. Augustine, has,
-of course, been explained by ignorant guessers
-as the place where the sea ebbs! But its earliest
-name to be traced is Ypwine&rsquo;s fliot, <i>i.e.</i>, the creek
-where some Jute of that name settled. Yp is
-probably the Eop in Eoppa, which is a common
-Saxon name, also found as Eobba, so that
-Eobbe&rsquo;s fleet easily becomes Ebbsfleet. <span class="sc">Upper
-Hardres</span> may take us to the Norman family
-which came from Ardres in Picardy, although
-it is possible to find a common Celtic origin for
-the name both of the French and the English
-village in the Celtic Ardd, that is, ploughland. It
-is Heg Hardres, <i>i.e.</i>, High Hardies, in early
-documents.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Horton Kirby</span> was simply Horton until the
-reign of Edward III., when a Lancashire Kirby
-married the heiress of the manor and rebuilt the
-castle. Even in 1377 I find it still called Hortune
-only. <span class="sc">Offham</span> is Offa&rsquo;s home, and several places,
-including probably <span class="sc">Otham</span>, bear his name. Here
-this Christian King of Mercia is said to have
-conquered Edmund of Kent. So Old Romney
-was earlier Offeton, Effeton, or Affeton. Offa
-ruled Sussex and Kent, and so we have Offham
-near Lewes, Offington near Worthing, Offham
-near Arundel, and Ufton near Tunstall. But the
-name of Offeton for Old Romney disappears after
-1281. <span class="sc">Foot&rsquo;s Cray</span>, and Footbury Hill near
-there, is named from Godwin Fot the Saxon.
-<span class="sc">Chelsfield</span> is said to record the name of a
-Saxon Ceol, a shortened form of Ceolmund, or
-Ceolbald, or Ceolwulf, all of which were common
-names. <span class="sc">Scotney Castle</span>, Lamberhurst, belonged
-in the 12th century to the Barons de Scoterni,
-who came from Pontigny, in N. France. They
-had also Scotney Court, at Lydd.</p>
-<p class="tb">One may add to these samples of places named
-from persons, two or three that very probably
-<span class="pb" id="Page_57">57</span>
-take us back to mythical personages. <span class="sc">Woodnesborough</span>
-(Wodenesbergh 1465, Wynsbergh
-1496), was named by the Jutish conquerors after
-their god Woden, whom they commemorated
-among the Teutonic names they bequeathed to
-our names of the week. There is another Woodnesborough
-in Wilts, and Wednesbury and Wednesfield
-in Staffordshire. And we note that the
-next parish is <span class="sc">Eastry</span>. For the name of this
-very old and important place in Saxon time
-various derivations have been proposed, but it is
-more than possible that it is the town of E&aacute;stor
-or Eostre, the goddess of Spring, whose name
-survived when the conversion of the heathen
-Saxons gave a new light to the festival in the
-Spring, which henceforth was to celebrate a
-greater Resurrection than that merely of the
-flowers. And possibly a third instance may be
-found in the name of <span class="sc">Aylesford</span>, which is
-Egelesford in the <i>Saxon Chronicle</i>, and Elesford
-in Domesday. Amongst various possible derivations
-that of Eigil, the Teutonic hero-archer or
-demigod, is worthy of consideration, since it is
-found as naming places elsewhere; for example,
-Aylesbury, in Buckinghamshire, which in the
-<i>Saxon Chronicle</i> appears as &AElig;gelesburh.</p>
-<h2 id="c11"><span class="small"><span class="sc">Absurdities in Derivation.</span></span></h2>
-<p>When a language is not pure, but the result
-of the intermingling and interaction of
-several tongues as distinct as Celtic,
-Saxon and Norman; and when, by the wear and
-tear of daily use through centuries, place-names
-have altered in detail of spelling and pronunciation;
-and when for a long time spelling and reading
-were arts known but to a small minority of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_58">58</span>
-the population, it is plainly inevitable that the
-original form and real meaning of a place-name
-should often be difficult to trace. But always
-in an enquiring mind there was the insistent
-WHY? which is a characteristic and a glory of
-man as a reasoning animal, and hence often a
-meaning was given to a word that is simply a
-sort of pun, an endeavour to explain a word by
-what it looks like in current speech or dialect
-when there was not the knowledge of earlier
-times and older tongues which elevates mere
-guessing into the science of etymology.</p>
-<p>Some Kentish examples of this source of error
-may be useful. Thus, when we trace <span class="sc">Maidstone</span>
-back into the earliest records we find that it has
-nothing to do with either Maid or Stone, but
-comes through many variations from the Celto-Saxon
-Medwegston, or town on the Medway.
-Yet though Lambard knew and quoted this in
-1570 he suggested also a meaning of &ldquo;mighty
-stone, a name given for the quarry of hard stone
-there!&rdquo; So, too, Hasted thinks <span class="sc">Loose</span> is so
-called because the stream loses itself underground
-(like the Mole in Surrey) for some eight
-hundred yards at Brishing! He might as well
-have ascribed the name to Loose and Detling
-having been long only Chapelries of Maidstone,
-but at last having been cut loose and made into
-separate parishes in Elizabethan times!</p>
-<p><span class="sc">Tenterden</span> is named, says an old Kentish
-writer, as &ldquo;some vulgar fancies conjecture, from
-the tenderness of its soil&rdquo;; <span class="sc">Feversham</span>, says
-another old Kentish writer, Phillipott, useful as
-an historian, useless to etymologists, &ldquo;is an unhealthy
-town, and carries the tokens of it in its
-name.&rdquo; <i>Id. est.</i>, the home of fevers! <span class="sc">Harbledown</span>,
-says Black, is so-called &ldquo;in allusion to its
-grassy downs and hills,&rdquo; as if grassiness were
-not a characteristic of any and every down and
-hill in Kent. <span class="sc">Gadshill</span>, we are solemnly told, is
-named from &ldquo;gads,&rdquo; clubs used by footpads who
-<span class="pb" id="Page_59">59</span>
-were not unknown there (or anywhere else) on
-Watling Street. We should smile less if the
-name was Padshill.</p>
-<p>And one of the most ancient, and indeed prehistoric,
-names in Kent is Penypot, a hill opposite
-Chilham. &ldquo;Here once,&rdquo; one old rustic would
-say, &ldquo;they dug up a pot full of pennies.&rdquo;
-&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; another would respond, &ldquo;it was where
-they used to sell ale for a penny a pot in the
-good old days!&rdquo; To such vile meanings may
-descend the venerable Celtic Pen y wlh&mdash;the
-Head of the Mound.</p>
-<p>One of the earliest Roman geographers heard
-of Thanet under its earliest name of Tanet, and
-because he knew a Greek word Thanatos, which
-means death, he so interpreted Thanet. On
-this absurdity he based a baseless legend which
-Lambarde in 1570 thus describes: &ldquo;There be no
-snakes in Tanet (saith he), and the earth that is
-brought from thence will kill them.&rdquo; (Why
-death to snakes any more than to sheep or
-shepherds? Why not go further and make
-Thanatos a lifeless place like the Dead Sea?) &ldquo;But
-whether he wrote this of any sure understanding
-that he had of the quality of the soil, or only by
-conjecture at the woord Thanatos, which in
-Greeke signifieth death, I wote not.&rdquo; This is
-as strong an example of conjectural derivation,
-with nothing but a superficial resemblance to
-support it, as we could find. But Lambarde himself,
-great as he is in many ways, gives derivations
-almost as baseless, <i>e.g.</i>, Blackheath,
-&ldquo;called of the colour of the soil!&rdquo; Wrotham,
-&ldquo;given for the great plentie of woorts or good
-hearbs that growe there.&rdquo; Farley, &ldquo;interpreted
-the place of the Boares, or Bulles&rdquo; (which? and
-why?). Sittingbourne, &ldquo;one interprets it
-Seethingbourne, Rivus Fervens aut Hulliens&rdquo;
-(<i>i.e.</i>, the boiling or bubbling river&mdash;in that flat
-country!). This is too much even for him and
-his times, and so he adds, &ldquo;but how likely let
-others see.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_60">60</div>
-<h2 id="c12"><span class="small"><span class="sc">Our &ldquo;Tons&rdquo; and &ldquo;Stones.&rdquo;</span></span></h2>
-<p>As given in <i>Kelly&rsquo;s Kent Directory</i>, our Tons
-and Stones are: Addington, Aldington,
-Allington, Barfreston, Bedmonton, Bilsington,
-Birchington, Blackmanstone, Bonnington
-(two), Bossington, Boughton (four), Brompton,
-Charlton (two), Cheriton, Chiddingstone,
-Chilmington, Chilton, Cliftonville, Cossington,
-Cozenton, Crofton, Culverstone, Cuxton, Davington,
-Denton (two), Doddington, Dumpton, Dunton
-Green, Eddington, Ellington, Egerton,
-Eggerton, Elmstone, Elvington, Folkestone,
-Foston Green, Funton, Garrington, Goldstone,
-Goodnestone (two), Guston, Hackington, Hampton
-(two), Hamptons, Holmstone Camp, Horton
-(two), Horton Kirby, Hunton, Kenardington,
-Kennington, Keston, Kingston or Kingstone,
-Kippington, Knowlton, Langton Green, Linton,
-Littlestone, Liverton Street, Loddington, Lullingstone,
-Lowton, Luton, Maidstone, Manston, Milton
-(two), Milton Regis, Milton Street, Monks
-Horton, Monkton, Murston, Nackington, Newington
-(three), Nonington, Horton, Orlestone,
-Orpington, Pevington, Plumpton, Poulton, Preston
-(two), Ripton, Salmestone, Scuddington,
-Seaton, Sevington, Sibton, Stone (four), Stonebridge
-(two), Stonebridge Green, Stone Cross
-(three), Stone Crouch, Stone Hill, Stone House,
-Stone Stairs, Stone Street, Stonehill (two), Sutton
-(three), Swanton Street, Tankerton, Teston,
-Thanington, Tilmanstone, Tottington, Twitton,
-Ufton, Upton, Wanstone, Weddington, Wierton
-Street, Wilderton, Willington Street, Wilmington,
-Wootton (three)&mdash;147 in all. One may add,
-for purposes of investigation, Stone, an old
-borough in Maidstone.</p>
-<p>First, one must endeavour to separate the tons
-and the stones&mdash;the Saxon settlements or towns
-and the places named from stones set for boundaries
-<span class="pb" id="Page_61">61</span>
-or for marks where manor courts or motes
-were held. And this is not always easy, since
-medi&aelig;val spelling was vague, and in some cases
-an original &ldquo;stone&rdquo; has become &ldquo;ton&rdquo; in later
-years, or <i>vice versa</i>. Generally, a reference to
-the earliest forms (where such can be found in
-Saxon or Norman, or even Early English documents)
-will settle the point. Thus Folkestone
-is by some identified with the site of the &ldquo;stone
-of inscription on the Gallic sea,&rdquo; mentioned by
-Nennius, the Saxon geographer. It is Folcesstane
-in the <i>Saxon Chronicle</i>, and Falchestan in
-Domesday, and therefore no explanation involving
-ton need be entertained. Keston, again, is
-Cystaninga, hence in Saxon charters between
-862 and 966, as being or having a boundary
-mark stone. It is Chestan in Domesday. But
-Chiddingstone should probably lose its final e
-and derive from a Saxon patronymic, although
-a modern and grotesque suggestion is that the
-dolmen there was used as a Chiding or judgment
-stone by Celtic or Saxon priests. Maidstone,
-again, should probably be Maidston, being
-Medwegston in the <i>Saxon Chronicle</i>, and almost
-certainly meaning the town on the Medway; although
-it is fair to say that an ending in stane
-is early found. Tilmanstone was earlier Telmeston,
-and Elmstone was Elmerston, and the
-earlier spellings of Goodnestone are Goodwinston,
-Gudewynston, and Goodneston.</p>
-<p>Stones are much fewer than &ldquo;tons,&rdquo; although
-no doubt the number of such marks (origin of
-our milestones) was increased by the Romans.
-Thus the place Stone, two miles west of Faversham
-and on their great main road Watling
-Street, is thought to mark the site of their
-military station of Durolevo, and thus to be
-named from the distance mark. We must also
-note that stone bridges were practically unknown
-to the Saxons, except those the Romans had left,
-and Stone Cross would not appear as a place-name
-<span class="pb" id="Page_62">62</span>
-until after their conversion, while a stone
-house, except as the castle of a Norman noble,
-would be of quite late date.</p>
-<p>As to the Tons, some are named from geographical
-position, such as Norton (Northtown),
-near Faversham, and the Suttons (South-town),
-on the edge of the Weald or south of Dartford;
-and, whatever may be the case with others, the
-Milton near Sittingbourne is called Middeltuna
-in the <i>Saxon Chronicle</i> and in Domesday, since
-it was reckoned the central town of Kent when
-Watling Street was far the greatest and most
-frequented route to be considered, being 42 miles
-from London and 31 from Dover. Our various
-Boughtons are &ldquo;settlements in the wood,&rdquo; as
-are also the Woottons. Monkton and the Prestons
-were settlements of monks and of colleges of
-priests.</p>
-<p>The great majority, however, denote the
-settlement of some Saxon (<i>i.e.</i> Jutish) family,
-such as Seafings or Sevingas at Sevington, the
-&AElig;lings at Allington, the Noningas at Nonington,
-the Cennings at Kennington, and so forth.
-We find this Saxon patronymic &ldquo;ing&rdquo; in 37 of
-our Kentish place names ending in ton, and
-when we add the ings like Barming (Bamling,
-Barmelinge, and Berblinge in Early English
-documents), Beltring, Bilting, Birling, Bobbing
-(Bobing-seata in a Saxon charter of 798&mdash;compare
-Bobbingsworth in Essex), Bramling.
-Bazing (at the junction of Kent, Sussex and
-Surrey), reminds us of Basing and Basingstoke
-in Hants and Basingham (in Domesday Book) in
-Sussex. Charing, Chevening (although this
-may be earlier and Celtic), Cooling, Detling,
-perhaps Drelingore, Eastling, Etching, Garlinge,
-Geddinge, Hacklinge, Hailing, Hawkinge,
-Hucking, Kemsing, Lidsing (not Lyminge, however),
-Mailing, Nullinge, Ospringe, Ottinge,
-Pedlinge, Postling, Ratling, Rawling, Reading
-Street (three), Rowling, Ruckinge, Sandling
-<span class="pb" id="Page_63">63</span>
-(two), Selling, Sellinge, Shelving, Spratling
-Street, Stelling, Stowting, Weavering Street,
-Welling, Witchling, and Yalding; and when to
-these we add the &ldquo;inghams&rdquo; I have given in a
-previous article, we might alter Tennyson&rsquo;s
-&ldquo;Saxon, and Norman, and Dane are we,&rdquo; into
-&ldquo;Mostly Saxon are we as to our place-names in
-Kent.&rdquo; Our two Charltons are of old Ceorletone&mdash;the
-town of the ceorls or husbandmen. Some
-&ldquo;tons&rdquo; come from personal names also, <i>e.g.</i>,
-Cuxton (compare Cuckfield in Sussex), Cuca and
-its diminutive Cucola are found as Anglo-Saxon
-names, and as Cockstane the place appears in
-Domesday, and as Cokelstone in 1472, nearly
-400 years later, with other forms Cockston,
-Coklestane, Cukelestane, Cookstone, etc. (all
-pointing to stone, and not ton, being properly
-the final syllable).</p>
-<p>There is, however, obviously much to be done
-before we can know&mdash;or even in some cases
-guess&mdash;as to the origin of some &ldquo;tons&rdquo; or
-&ldquo;stones.&rdquo;</p>
-<h3 class="inline" id="c13"><span class="sc">Our &ldquo;Hams.&rdquo;</span></h3>
-<p>In considering the three score and ten, or
-more, place-names in Kent which end in
-<i>ham</i>, we are met with the initial difficulty that
-there are two Saxon words Ham&mdash;home, and
-Hamm&mdash;land drained by dykes, an East Friesian
-word, though the far more common Ham is the
-Teutonic heim, familiar as a suffix in Germany,
-which in Picardy becomes hen, and in Friesland
-um. Either ton or ham as a suffix after <i>ing</i>
-denotes where a Saxon family or clan had settled
-and made its toun or heim. Thus the P&aelig;fings
-made a Pevington in Kent and a Pavingham in
-Bedfordshire, and the Aldings an Aldington in
-Kent and Worcester, and an Aldingham in
-<span class="pb" id="Page_64">64</span>
-Lancashire, the Leasings a Lossingham in Kent
-and a Lissington in Lancashire. Such instances
-do not uphold what some have held&mdash;that there
-were two words spelled the same, the one
-meaning home and the other an enclosure.</p>
-<p>As to the Hamm or Haam for marshy ground,
-it would seem to be found in Kent as accounting
-for Ham Ponds, near Sandwich, marshy ground
-dear to botanists, and Mersham (A.S. Mersc&mdash;marsh)
-in Romney, and Merston (Merxton in
-74), near Rochester. Ham Green and Ham
-Street are also Romney Marsh names. Waterham
-and Wetham would suggest the same
-origin, the latter being in the Rainham marshes
-and the former, I think, not far from the Faversham
-marshes. Dagenham also (as elsewhere) is
-Decca&rsquo;s marsh land. But the ordinary hams,
-as we may call them, have again to be subdivided
-into those which indicate the settlement
-of a Saxon family; those which enshrine a personal
-name; and those which relate to the environment
-or situation of the home.</p>
-<p>In the first division would came the cases in
-which ham followed the patronymic ing, denoting
-&ldquo;the sons of.&rdquo; Thus Gillingham (Gelingham in
-Domesday) was the settlement of the Gillings,
-who are also found at Gilling in Yorkshire, Gillingham
-in Norfolk, and Gillingham in Dorset.
-The home of the Mottings was at Mottingham,
-and that of the Leasings at Lossenham. Our
-Chilham would not at first sight seem to come
-in here; but in a charter of King Wihdraed in
-699 it is called &ldquo;Cilling,&rdquo; and in another of 814
-&ldquo;the port which is called Cillincg&rdquo; (the Stour
-was then navigable up to here for small craft),
-and a manor in Chilham is Shillingfield, so that
-a connection with the Gillings may be suggested.
-Farningham might seem <i>prima facie</i> to add
-another to this unexpectedly small class; but
-there is no known tribe of Farnings, and the old
-name was Fremyngham (again with no tribe
-<span class="pb" id="Page_65">65</span>
-name to support it). It has been suggested that
-it derives from the A.S. Frem or foreign, and
-denotes a settlement of foreigners (possibly
-Danes) coming from the Thames up the Darenth
-valley.</p>
-<p>In the second division we might place any
-hams recording the personal names of those who
-founded them. Here Isaac Taylor may err in
-saying: &ldquo;In the Anglo-Saxon charters we frequently
-find this suffix united with the names of
-families&mdash;never with those of individuals.&rdquo; In
-this he follows Leo in his <i>Anglo Saxon Names</i>.
-And yet on another page (compare p. 331 with
-p. 131) he gives a list of places derived from the
-names of individuals. But certainly Godmersham
-and Rodmersham suggest personal names, and
-no one has ascribed any other origin to Harrietsham,
-which, even down to the fifteenth century,
-appears as Heryotesham. In one probably
-illiterate will of 1594 it is called &ldquo;Henry Etisham
-alias Harrysam,&rdquo; the latter being no doubt the
-vernacular pronunciation. So surely Meopham
-is Mepa&rsquo;s Home. No letter o appeared in the
-name before or during the 14th century, when
-Simon de Mepham was Archbishop of Canterbury.
-It is a modern intrusion, left unpronounced.
-Icelham, McClure gives as meaning
-the Home of Icel, like Icelsham in Sussex, thus
-contravening the dictum of Taylor and Leo as to
-personal names. So Offham, and probably
-Otham, is said by the learned <i>Sussex Place-Names</i>
-to be named after King Offa, who had such
-power and made such great benefactions to the
-Church in Sussex and Kent. Finglesham, called
-Flenguessa in Domesday and Fengesham in 1206,
-suggests a person rather than a family when the
-common ing is not then found in the name, and
-so does Wittersham, especially in its old forms
-of Westricheshamme and Witrychesham.
-Faversham was Febres-ham in 811 (Charters
-and Rolls), and Febresham in 858. In Domesday
-(1086) it appears as Faversham, and as to
-<span class="pb" id="Page_66">66</span>
-this McClure, a great recent authority in Saxon,
-says: &ldquo;The first element is a personal name in
-the genitive.&rdquo; As, however, there seems to be
-no similar Saxon designation, he suggests a
-possible survival of the Latin Faber, <i>i.e.</i>, Smith,
-in a thoroughly Latinized part of Kent. But
-this pre-supposes that the place was named from
-a single unnamed operative. Betsham is
-obscure, but when we find, also in Kent, Betshurst
-and Betteshanger, a personal origin seems
-likely. As McClure says, our Luddesdown seems
-to involve a personal name; he might say the
-same of Luddenham.</p>
-<p>The third division introduces us to settlements
-or homes named from their environment or
-situation. Thus Higham (Heahhaam in a
-charter of 770, and Hehham in one of 774), is
-plainly from the A.S. Heah, whence our High;
-and so is Hougham (earlier Hugham), near
-Dover. Burham is the fortified place or Burh,
-found in 1498 as Borowham, in 1511 as Borougham,
-and in 1549 in its present form. Homes
-between Rochester and Aylesford had to be
-strong in the days and the place of constant
-maraudings and wars. Mersham is the Mersc
-home in Romney Marsh. Westerham, of old
-Ostreham (compare Westenhanger alias Ostringhanger)
-is the little white &ldquo;home in the west&rdquo; of
-Kent. Ickham&mdash;Ioccham in a charter of 785,
-in Andrededa&mdash;otherwise Yeckham, is probably
-the settlement on the yoke of arable land, from
-the Saxon measure Yeok. Chartham (Certeham
-in Domesday) is the home in the forest, chart and
-hart being varying forms of the Teutonic word
-for forest, the former more common in England,
-the latter in Germany. Perhamsted, says
-McClure, is the homestead where pears were
-cultivated. Thornham (though Turnham in
-Domesday) is said to derive from Hawthorns,
-Thynne being Saxon for thorn, and haegathorn
-later for hedge-thorn&mdash;whence also probably our
-<span class="pb" id="Page_67">67</span>
-Kentish Eythorne (anciently Hegythe Thorne),
-and Eyhorne (Haythorne in Plea of Henry III.),
-as place-names. Weald, Wold, Wald, and Wood
-(A.S., Wudu and Weald), all mean woods, so
-that we can understand our Wouldham and
-Waltham. Lenham must be the settlement of
-the Len, unless it could be proved that the river
-ever had another name, Celtic as it probably is.</p>
-<p>The following is a full list of the &ldquo;Hams&rdquo; in
-Kent according to <i>Kelly&rsquo;s Directory of Kent</i>,
-and I have extracted them in the hope that it
-may save some trouble to a future writer on our
-place-names. I am not of the class of those who
-say: &ldquo;Posterity has done nothing for me, so
-why should I do anything for posterity?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Adisham, Alkham, Barham, Bagham, Beckenham,
-Burham, Bentham, Betsham, Bayham,
-Cudham, Cobham, Clapham, Chatham, Chartham,
-Chilham, Crowdleham, Crockham, Dagenham,
-Eltham, Elham, Fawkham, Faversham,
-Farningham, Finglesham, Frogham, Godmersham,
-Gillingham, Ham ponds, Ham Green
-(two), Ham Hill, Ham Street, Heverham, Ham,
-Harrietsham, Hougham, Higham, Horsham,
-Ickham, Ightham, Lenham, Luddenham, Lossenham,
-Meopham, Mersham, Mongeham, Mottingham,
-Newnham, Offham, Otham, Otterham,
-Petham, Peckham, Rayham, Rainham, Rodmersham,
-Sydenham, Shoreham, Teynham, Thornham,
-Waltham, Waterham, Wetham, Wickham,
-Wickhambreux, Westerham, Wrotham,
-Wingham, Wittersham, Wouldham, Yaldham.
-Kilburne wrote that there were 49, but here I
-enumerate 71, and one might add Perhamsted,
-Iselham, Freckenham, Mistelham, and the Hundreds
-of Kinghamford and Downhamford, making
-77, all of undoubtedly Saxon origin.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_68">68</div>
-<h3 class="inline" id="c14"><span class="sc">Our &ldquo;Soles,&rdquo; &ldquo;Burys,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Hithes.&rdquo;</span></h3>
-<p>The word Sole occurs frequently as a Kentish
-place-name, and is purely Saxon. Dr. Bosworth&rsquo;s
-<i>Anglo-Saxon Dictionary</i> gives Sol
-as meaning &ldquo;soil&mdash;dirt&mdash;a wallowing place&rdquo;;
-while Lewis defines it as &ldquo;a dirty pond of standing
-water.&rdquo; The Saxon verb is Sylian, &ldquo;to soil
-or cover with mud.&rdquo; So an old Kentish will has
-the words &ldquo;beside the wateringe sole in trend
-(<i>i.e.</i>, the end) of Yckhame streete.&rdquo; Now, as
-the chief industries of the Saxons in Kent were
-pigs and pots&mdash;as now they are bricks and beer&mdash;it
-is obvious that pigs, especially in clay soil,
-would create many wallowing places. So we find
-Sole Street, near Broadstairs (now corrupted
-into Sorvell and so made unmeaning and unintelligible),
-another by Cobham, another by
-Crundale, and another by Selling. We find also
-Bradsole (S. Radigund&rsquo;s near Dover), Buttsole
-in Eastry, Blacksole at Wrotham, Maidensole,
-Longsole Heath by Allington, Thewsole, and
-Hangmansole in Romney Marsh, Eastsole, Newsole
-near Coldred, Esole near Nonington, Podsole
-near Headcorn, a Mote-sole Street in Sandwich,
-Mudshole by Hawkinge, Barnsole Lane,
-Gillingham, Capel Sole, Barnsole in Staple,
-Westfield Sole in Boxley, Rigsol Road in Otterden,
-and last, but not least, Paddisole, or Padsole,
-at Maidstone.</p>
-<h3><span class="sc">Our &ldquo;Burys.&rdquo;</span></h3>
-<p>There are two Anglo-Saxon words which have
-to be distinguished&mdash;Beorh, like the German
-Berg, meaning a hill; and Buruh or Byrig,
-which comes later into the suffix Bury, which
-again later comes to be used for a division of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_69">69</span>
-Hundred or simply for a town. In the south of
-England we have most of the distinctively Saxon
-or Jutish Bury, while in the north we have the
-Anglian and Norse forms of Burgh, Brough,
-Borough, more common. And one must add,
-as a variant of the same word, Barrow, which
-in modern use we confine to a tumulus for the
-sepulture of a great warrior or leader. As these
-British camps were generally on high ground for
-observation and for defence, the ideas represented
-by Beorh and by Buruh would inevitably
-intertwine. The British and Saxon camps were
-no doubt numerous when we consider the centuries
-of marauders and invaders which kept our
-earliest forefathers in a constant fear. They
-were usually round or oblong, whereas the fewer
-and later camps or forts of the Romans were
-rectangular. Surrounded by a deep ditch, the
-earth of which was thrown up to make a wall,
-into them in troublous times were collected
-families and flocks, so that the transition of
-meaning from the Byrig or fort to the Borough
-or town was easy. Canterbury, for example,
-began as Cantwara-byrig, the fort of the folk of
-Kent, long before it developed into its most important
-borough or city. So, in another county,
-Gl&aelig;stingaberig became Glastonbury.</p>
-<p>In Kent we find Farnborough, Frindsbury,
-Wateringbury, Hildenborough, Pembury, Cobhambury,
-Southborough, Oldbury, Bigbury,
-Glassenbury, two Hawkenburies, Holborough,
-Howbury, Scadbury, Goodbury, Eastbury, Fallburie,
-Stockbury (where the ditch and bank had
-been supplemented by a palisade of stocks, the
-predecessor of our fathers&rsquo; cheveaux de frise in
-warlike defence), Binbury, Westborough (in
-Maidstone above and defending the Medway),
-Woodnesbury, Willesborough, Queenborough,
-Richborough, Bidborough, Marshborough,
-Statenborough, Tattlebury, Downbury, Hockenbury,
-Dunbury and Tatlingbury&mdash;a long list
-<span class="pb" id="Page_70">70</span>
-which predicates long years, or rather centuries,
-of fighting in defence, as much as my previous
-list of forestal names proves how much of Kent
-was covered with woods.</p>
-<p>Some of these, like Oldbury and Bigbury, are
-undoubtedly old British camps or forts; others
-were adapted, or newly made, by Romans and,
-later, by Saxons, while again later still a
-Norman castle might be reared on the old
-strategic spot, as in the case of Thornham
-Castle, near me. Flinders Petrie, however, says
-that &ldquo;many sites which by their name of bury
-suggest a camp or fort are now bare of remains.&rdquo;
-So he writes after examining Downbury Farm,
-near Pembury, Hockenbury, and Dunbury, near
-Staplehurst, Tattlebury near Headcorn, Tatlingbury
-near Capel, Perry Hill near Cooling, Pembury,
-Frindsbury and Wateringbury.</p>
-<p>Our Barrows in Kent are mainly small, graves
-rather than mounds, but we have the place-names
-Barrow Green, Barrow Hill near Ashford,
-and Barrow Hill by Sellindge.</p>
-<h3><span class="sc">Our &ldquo;Hithes.&rdquo;</span></h3>
-<p>Hithe is the Saxon for haven, or place where
-ships could lie, and Hythe (Heda in Domesday
-Book, and Hee in a deed of 1229) was near the
-edge of the sea when history begins; but West
-Hythe, which is now three miles from the sea,
-was the old port used by the Romans and by
-them called Limene, the harbour. Hence our
-modern Lympne&mdash;Portus Lemanis, in which the
-p is a modern addition. I find it Limene in 1291,
-Lymen in 1396, Limne in 1475, and Lymne in
-1480.</p>
-<p>Then, right in the Weald, is the hamlet of
-Smallhythe, three miles south of Tenterden.
-Down to 1509, however, there was a channel
-from the sea up to here.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_71">71</div>
-<p>Newheth, or New Hythe, is a hamlet of East
-Malling&mdash;and it was a sort of port (or perhaps a
-wharf) on the Medway for shipping goods from
-South Kent and the Weald.</p>
-<p>On the Thames, below Dartford, is Greenhithe,
-which has kept both its name and the
-justification thereof from the times of the Saxons
-to the present day. There the Danish King had
-an entrenched camp as a winter station for his
-soldiers. Here William the Conqueror was
-stopped by the men of Kent until he confirmed
-them in their old Saxon laws and privileges. From
-here Sir John Franklin and Captain Crozier
-sailed in the Erebus and Terror (in the year and
-month of my birth) on their last and fatal voyage
-to the Pole. Here still the hithe discharges its
-lime and chalk, and has an environment and
-background of green fields and woods.</p>
-<p>&AElig;rrehythe, &ldquo;the old haven,&rdquo; known to us as
-Erith, the landing place for what was from 1178,
-when it was founded, the important Abbey of
-Lesnes, which still gives its name to the Hundred.</p>
-<h3 class="inline" id="c15"><span class="sc">Our &ldquo;Cold Harbours.&rdquo;</span></h3>
-<p>Perhaps the most common place-name in
-England is that of Cold Harbour; though
-Sutton and Norton may run it close. Over
-one hundred and seventy have been enumerated
-in England, a number which would be brought
-up to over two hundred if we added the Caldecots
-and the Calcotts (we have a Calcott in
-Sturry parish) which are names with the same
-meaning. And yet in a sense Cold Harbour is
-not a place-name, for the only parish of that
-name was not formed and named until 1842. It
-is near Dorking. However, as a name of a
-manor or a farm it is common. Thus in London
-(where we should hardly expect Cold Harbours
-<span class="pb" id="Page_72">72</span>
-of the kind found in country places) there was
-the Manor of Coldherberghe, of which we know
-much since 1327. Situated on the bank of the
-Thames near London Bridge, its mansion was
-tenanted by royal dukes, a bishop, a Lord
-Mayor, and afterwards became the Hall of the
-Watermen&rsquo;s Company, and at last the City of
-London Brewery. The other is in Camberwell,
-which was one great manor at the time of the
-Conquest, but later divided into minor lordships,
-to two of which the name of Cold Harbour was
-given, of which one was Cold Herbergh,
-Hachesham (Hatcham now), while the other
-survives in the well known Cold Harbour Lane,
-in Camberwell. In early 19th century maps Cold
-Blow Farm was the representative of the old
-manor (Kent has a Cold Blow in Bexley). A
-curious 15th century corruption was Coldabbeye,
-though there was never an abbey there. The
-farm succumbed to suburban expansion in the
-19th century; but Harbour Road, Cold Harbour
-Lane, and Cold Harbour Place, tell us of its
-site.</p>
-<p>The Cold Harbours in Kent are thirty in
-number, while ten are found in each of the contiguous
-counties of Surrey and Sussex. They
-are found at Addington, Aldington, Aylesford,
-Barham Downs, Bishopsbourne, Bridge, Chislehurst,
-Deptford, Ditton, Eltham, Higham, Hildenborough,
-Eltham, Lamberhurst, Lymne,
-Maidstone, Newington, Northfleet, Penshurst,
-Sellinge, Sittingbourne, Stoke-in-Hoo, Sutton-at-Hone,
-Tenterden, Trench, Tunbridge, Woodnesborough,
-Woolwich, Wrotham, and Wye.
-The majority of these are upon or near Roman
-sites, or on the Roman main roads, a fact to be
-borne in mind when we come to consider their
-origin. For Isaac Taylor says of early travelling:
-&ldquo;Where no religious house existed to receive
-the traveller he would usually be compelled to
-content himself with the shelter of bare walls.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_73">73</span>
-The ruins of deserted Roman villas were no
-doubt so used, and such places seem commonly
-to have borne the name of Cold Harbour. In
-the neighbourhood of ancient roads we find no
-less than seventy, and about a dozen more bearing
-the analogous name of Caldecot or &lsquo;cold
-cot.&rsquo;&rdquo; His figures have now been shown to
-be very much under the mark. So Forbes and
-Burmester, in their <i>Our Roman Highways</i>,
-say: &ldquo;The appearance of such names is believed
-to be a sure indication of the use in comparatively
-modern times of Roman buildings for
-purposes of temporary shelters; and the occasional
-discovery of tessellated pavements injured
-by fires lighted in the corners of rooms suggests
-their utilization by wayfarers.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Not that all would have been villas or private
-residences. The orderly and practical Romans
-on their great military roads had a colonia at
-each 15 or 20 miles with a mansio or government
-posting station, and between each, at about
-five miles distance, was a mutatio with less
-accommodation, and used by a humbler class.
-The manager of each was called a Strator&mdash;like
-our Way Warden. In many cases we find that
-the Cold Harbours come exactly where we
-should look for the regularly set mutatio. The
-same kind of arrangement is found in the Hans
-or Khans of the East, which provide shelter for
-traveller and stabling for his horse or other
-beast of burden; but no bed or food. Analogous
-also are the dak-bungalows familiar to us in
-India.</p>
-<p>The name, however, is pure Saxon, like the
-German Kalt Herberg, and the surviving French
-Auberge for a small place of rest and refreshment.
-Mr. Unthank, a friend and church-worker
-of mine in Walworth, enlisted my interest
-in the name a dozen years ago, and since he has
-written learnedly on the subject in <i>Notes and
-Queries</i> (1914) and the <i>Home Counties Magazine</i>
-<span class="pb" id="Page_74">74</span>
-(1912). He calls them &ldquo;the leanest shadows of
-our cheerful inns,&rdquo; and though bare walls and
-a bit of a roof would be better than nothing to a
-traveller over Barham Downs, yet, compared
-with the &ldquo;warmest welcome in an inn&rdquo;
-experienced elsewhere, he would no doubt call
-it a cold harbour. Later, and in Middle English,
-the Heribeorg, shelter for a host, became as
-Herberg a synonym for any inn, and later still
-Harbourers or harbingers were the caterers or
-victuallers, who at last gained the right to sell
-ale in competition with the more normal
-hostelries. Then the trade-name became a surname,
-and John le Herberger appears, and
-perhaps the Harpers of to-day indicate an innkeeper
-rather than a musician as their ancestor.</p>
-<p>Of course, the perverse ingenuity of some has
-invented strange derivations for the name. Stow
-suggests that they were coal-stations! Another
-writer (who apparently only knew of one Cold
-Harbour near London Bridge) that it was where
-the K&ouml;ln or Cologne merchants had their headquarters!
-Another derives from Col (ubris)
-arbor&mdash;the tree or staff round which a serpent
-twines. This is the emblem of Mercury the
-messenger of Jupiter, and may have been therefore
-the sign of the Roman posting-stations!</p>
-<h3 class="inline" id="c16"><span class="sc">Anderida.</span></h3>
-<p>As I have already said, Kent was once mainly
-either dense prim&aelig;val forest, or marshland,
-which fringed nearly all its coastal
-border from Sussex to London. The greater part
-of the forest was that which extended along the
-northern border of the South Saxons with a
-breadth of thirty and a length of one hundred
-and twenty miles. But the royal forest of Blean
-(in which I was born) is continuous with
-Anderida, although it bears a separate name in
-<span class="pb" id="Page_75">75</span>
-a charter of King Offa in 791. This would make
-the forestal land extend from Whitstable through
-East and Mid Kent, Northern Sussex, Southern
-Surrey, and Eastern Hampshire, right down to
-Petersfield. Distinct, but contiguous, was the
-Cestmwarowalth or Cestersetta Wald, of which
-part remains in the woods between Rochester
-and Maidstone, although some would place it
-near Lyminge.</p>
-<p>This prim&aelig;val forest is still marked by a great
-survival of woodland and parks, as a coloured
-map of Kent would show, and also by the
-abundance of the characteristic terminations of
-burst, den, ley, holt, and feld. It names the
-Weald (Teutonic Wad&mdash;wood), although therein
-more cleared than anywhere else, and the less
-known Roman road, Well Street, which ran
-through it from Maidstone, should be probably
-the Wald road.</p>
-<p>Generally called Anderida from the name the
-Romans gave to their fort and garrisoned place
-near Pevensey, this is only a change from the
-earlier Andred. Coed-Andred was its Celtic
-name, from Coed, a wood, which word appears
-also in Ked Coed (the hollow dolman in the
-wood), which was corrupted into Kits Coty
-House; while the Cotswolds give the Saxon
-addition to the Celtic name, so that the meaning
-is Wood-wood, just as Durbeck or the Ravensbourne
-mean Water-water by the Saxon surnaming
-of a Celtic name. In early Saxon
-charters, which are written in Latin, it appears
-as Saltus-Andred, Silva-Andred, Saltus communis,
-or Silva regalis, while in Saxon it is
-Andred, Andredsleage, or Andredsweald.</p>
-<p>As to the meaning of the name, Edwards
-thinks it a proper name, which is very improbable
-considering its extent. Lambarde says
-Andred in the Celtic means great, which is
-simplest and best, provided that such a word is
-<span class="pb" id="Page_76">76</span>
-proved to exist. Dr. Guest refers it, less probably,
-to a Celtic negative an and dred, a dwelling,
-and Lewin to &ldquo;an&rdquo; for the &ldquo;deni,&rdquo; for oak-forest,
-and by a &ldquo;dhu&rdquo; for black.</p>
-<p>It may be here interesting to give a list of the
-names borne nearly a thousand years ago by
-some towns and villages in Kent, especially
-those in the Weald. In a map in Furley&rsquo;s
-<i>Weald</i>, he gives the manors and places mentioned
-in the Domesday Book (A.D. 1086), and
-by this it appears that settlements and cultivation
-were nearly all on the north and east edges
-of the great forest of Anderida. The only exceptions
-are Tivedale (now Tudely), Benindene
-(Benenden), Tepindene (Tiffenden), and
-Belicedene, which are deeper in the forest.</p>
-<p>Taking the line of the Kentish Weald from
-west to east, we find fringing the prim&aelig;val
-wood, Distreham (Westerham), Briestede
-(Brasted), Sondresse (Sundridge), Brotenham
-(Wrotham), Nargourde (Mereworth), Pecheham
-(W. Peckham), Pecheham (East Peckham),
-Otringebury (Wateringbury), Nedstede (Nettlestead),
-Hallinges (Yalding), Meddestane (Maidstone),
-Boltone Monchensei (Boughton Monchelsea),
-Certh (Chart Sutton), Suttone (Sutton
-Valence), Sudtone (East Sutton), Olecumbe
-(Ulcombe), Boltone Archiepiscopi (B. Malherbe),
-Bogelei (Bewley in B. Malherbe), Piventone
-(Pevington), Pluckelei (Pluckley), Rotinge (Roting
-in Pluckley), Litecert (Little Chart), Certh
-Mill, Certh (Great Chart), Eshetesford or Estefort
-(Ashford), Merseham (Mersham), Aldingtone
-(Aldington), Limes (Lymne), Boningtone
-(Bonnington), Bilsvitone (Bilsington), Rochinges
-(Ruckinge), Orleverstone (Orleston), Werahorne
-(Warehorne), Tintintone Dene (Tinton in Warehorne),
-Apeldres (Appledore), Palestre (Palster
-in Wittersham), Newedene (Newenden).</p>
-<p>In the rest of Chenth (Kent) the chief places
-mentioned in Domesday were Bromlei (Bromley),
-<span class="pb" id="Page_77">77</span>
-Lolingstone (Lullingstone), Tarenteforte (Dartford),
-Gravesham (Gravesend), Rovescestre
-(Rochester), Esledes (Leeds), Scapige (Sheppey),
-Favershant (Faversham), Wi (Wye), Goversham
-(Godmersham), Cantuaria (Canterbury),
-Forewic (Fordwich), Roculf (Reculver), Tanet
-(Thanet), Sandwice (Sandwich), Estrei (Eastry),
-Addelam (Deal), Douere (Dover), Fulchestan
-(Folkestone), Heda (Hythe), and Romene
-(Romney).</p>
-<p>One thing that strikes one at once is the proof
-any list of Kentish villages gives of the forestal
-character of Kent. As one of my aims is to save
-trouble on the part of some future writer who
-shall produce the long overdue History of
-Kentish Place-Names, I will here transcribe all
-which indicate a woodland origin. About a few
-I am doubtful, but probably others which I have
-in ignorance left out would balance them. There
-are in this list 20 of the characteristic dens,
-although far more survive as the names of
-manors or now uninhabited parts; there are 15
-hursts and 35 woods&mdash;some of the last being
-no doubt modern as names of places. I make
-174 of these forestal names as under:&mdash;</p>
-<p>Abbey Wood, Ackhold (Oakwood), Acol (alias
-Wood), Acrise? (Oakridge), Appledore, Arnold&rsquo;s
-Oak, Ash, Ashenden, Ashford, Ashley, Ashurst,
-Bargrove, Bellegrove (Benenden), Betteshanger,
-Bircholt, Boghurst Street, Bough Beech, Boughton
-(four), Boxhurst (Boxley), Bredhurst, Broad
-Oak, Brogueswood, Broome, Broomfield, High
-Brooms, Broomstreet, Bush, Challock Wood,
-Chart (four), Chartham, Chartham Hatch,
-Cheriton, Chesnut Street, Cobham Wood, Cowden,
-Cockham Wood, Colds Wood, Comp
-Woods, Crookhurst Street, Denstead, Denstroud,
-Denton (three), Denwood, Dingleden,
-East Malling Woods, Eastwood, Eggringe
-Wood, Elmley, Elmley Ferry, Elmstead (two),
-Elmstone, Eyehorne Hatch, Eyhorne Street,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_78">78</span>
-Eythorne, Hawkenhurst, Filmer&rsquo;s Wood, Five
-Oak Green, Forest Hill, Four Elms, Frogholt,
-Goathurst Common, Gore Wood, Forsley
-Wood, Goudhurst, Grove, Grove End, Grove
-Ferry, Grove Green, Hatch Green, Hawkhurst,
-Hazelwood Hill, Hengrove, Henhurst, Henwood,
-Heronden, Hoaden, Hockenden, Hollingbourne,
-Hollanden, Holm Mill, Holmstone, Holt
-Street, Holwood Hill, Hookstead Green (Oakstead?),
-Horsmonden, Hurst, Ivy Hatch (Ileden),
-Kidbrooke?, King&rsquo;s Wood, Kingsnorth,
-Knockhall, Knockholt, Lamberhurst, Leywood,
-Maiden Wood, Maplescombe, Marden, Mark
-Beech, Marwood, Mereworth Woods, Molash,
-Mussenden, Nagden, Northwood, Norwood
-(two), Nurstead (old Nutstead), Oakhurst, Oakley,
-Old Tree, Otterden, Oxenden Corner, Paddock
-Wood, Penenden Heath, Penshurst, Perry
-Street, Perry Wood, Pickhurst Green, Pinden,
-Plumstead, Plumpton, Quarry Wood, Rainden,
-Ringwould, Rolvenden, Saltwood, Sandhurst,
-Sevenoaks, Shadoxhurst, Sibertswold, Shottenden,
-Silcox Wood, Sissinghurst, Smarden, Snoll
-Hatch, Snoad Street, Southernden, Southwood,
-Speldhurst, Standen, Staplehurst, Swanscombe
-Wood, Tenterden, Thornham, Three Beeches,
-Eickenhurst, Waldershare, Waltham, Warden,
-Weald, Westenhanger, Westwood (two), Wissenden,
-Womenswould, Woodchurch, Woodcut
-Hill, Woodlands (two), Woodruff, Woodside
-Green, Wouldham.</p>
-<h2 id="c17"><span class="small"><span class="sc">Land Divisions of Kent.</span></span></h2>
-<p>Uninterruptedly from Saxon times
-Kent has been divided into districts called
-Lathes, and these into Hundreds, and
-these again into Borowes or Townes, the last
-being in Kent synonymous and used to the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_79">79</span>
-exclusion of the name parish down to the times
-of Elizabeth.</p>
-<p>First, as to the meanings and uses of these
-three words.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Lathe</span> takes us back to the Saxon L&aelig;th for
-land, and in Latin documents appears as Lestus
-or Lastus, <i>e.g.</i>, &ldquo;In Lasto Sanctii Augustini&rdquo;
-in a deed of 1347. Lambarde, however, derives
-it from a verb gelathian, to assemble; while
-Latham, following the German writer Zeuss, says
-the Terr&aelig; l&oelig;tic&aelig; were lands given to the L&oelig;ti.
-L&oelig;ti is the Roman form of Leute, <i>i.e.</i>, People,
-<i>i.e.</i>, the Teutonic mercenaries who were imported
-to defend the Litus Saxonicum&mdash;the eastern and
-south-eastern coast&mdash;which was especially open
-to the attacks of Scandinavian pirates. The
-abstruse and involved explanation will hardy
-be preferred. It is a purely Kentish word.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Hundred.</span>&mdash;This familiar word, first found in
-the Laws of King Edgar, 1000 A.D., comes
-from the old High German (Allemannisch),
-Huntare or Huntre. The Huntares in N. Europe
-were the sub-divisions of the Gau, the primary
-settlement with independent jurisdiction, a word
-to be traced in such place-names as Spengay
-and Wormegay, and even in Ely, for its earliest
-form was Eligabirig. But why Hundred? Some
-say each contained an hundred hides of land
-(but hundreds vary much in size). Some say
-each was a district wherein 100 soldiers had to
-be forthcoming in war&mdash;this approves itself to
-Lambarde and Spelman. Some refer it to the
-original settlement of 100 Jutish warriors, as
-sub-divisions of the Teutonic army which conquered
-the Britons. Brampton thinks each was
-to contain 100 villages. But in view of the historical
-and legal use of the word one may prefer
-the number of the freeholders in an area as constituting
-the Hundred. Thus the great legal
-authority, Blackstone, says: &ldquo;As 10 families of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_80">80</span>
-freeholders made a town or tithing, so 10 tithings
-made an Hundred.&rdquo; Each had its Hundred
-Court for civil and criminal jurisdiction; each
-its Hundred man or constable; each its Hundred
-Mote or assembly or parliament; each its Hundred-penny,
-or local tax on and in the Hundred.
-Most English counties were, and are, divided
-into Hundreds, wapentakes, or wards. So
-Caxton, writing in 1485, says: &ldquo;In Yorkshire
-ben xxii hondredes.&rdquo; Of these words Wapentake
-indicates the defensive military organisation
-of the Danish intruders, and Hundred the more
-peaceful settlements of Jutes and Saxons. A
-synonym peculiar to Sussex is the word Rape,
-the origin of which is said to be that lands seized
-by the Conqueror were plotted out by the hrepp
-or rope.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Tithings</span> were the divisions of the Hundred
-or Wapentake or Ward or Rape, and the term
-is used in most counties. But in Kent Borowe or
-Ton or Towne is used instead. A Tything, Freeburgh
-or Decennary, was a district containing ten
-householders, who were answerable to the King
-for each other&rsquo;s good behaviour. Each tything
-formed a little commonwealth, and chose its
-own dean (decanus or chief man of ten) or head,
-who was sometimes called Alderman on account
-of his age and experience. Most commonly,
-however, he was called the Borsholder from the
-Anglo-Saxon Bohr a surety, and Ealder, head or
-chief. The members of each tything formed a
-court of justice in which disputes were heard.
-Right down to 1836 the inhabitants of an Hundred
-where damage was done were each liable
-to pay compensation for it. The tendency of
-small bodies to take petty and shortsighted
-views in social matters is evidenced in John
-Bunyan&rsquo;s <i>Pilgrim&rsquo;s Progress</i>, where, quoting a
-much earlier proverb, he speaks of &ldquo;Mr. Penny-wise-pound-foolish,&rdquo;
-and &ldquo;Mr. Get-i&rsquo;-th&rsquo; Hundred
-and lose i&rsquo; the Shire.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_81">81</div>
-<p>Originally there were seven Lathes in Kent&mdash;Borowart,
-Estrei, Middletune, Wiwarlet, Limowart,
-Sudtone, and Elesford, of which the first
-five covered East Kent and the last two West
-Kent. Each derived its name from the chief
-town in each. Those in East Kent had previously
-been Roman Villas or towns, while Sutton-at-Hone
-and Aylesford were of great antiquity.</p>
-<p>Later Borowart and Estrei were united under
-the name of S. Augustine&rsquo;s, and Middletune and
-Wiwarlet together formed the Lathe of Sherwinhope,
-which again, by the addition of the Seven
-Hundreds of the Weald and the Hundred of
-Marden, received its present territory and name
-of the Lathe of Scray.</p>
-<p>One finds also a Lestus de Hedelynge containing
-the three Hundreds of Eastry, Quernilo
-and Beawesberghe. In this district an old wood
-in Waldershare is still Hedlinge.</p>
-<p>Since the time of Henry the Third there have
-been but five Lathes, named S. Augustine&rsquo;s,
-Shepway, Scray, Aylesford, and Sutton-at-Hone.</p>
-<p>Now as to their names.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Borowart</span>, Boro-wara-lest, was named from
-Canterbury, the chief borough in Kent, and so
-means the people of the borough, the chief one.
-Later it was named from S. Augustine&rsquo;s Abbey
-in Canterbury, to which a great part of the land
-in the Lathe belonged.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Estrei</span>, or Estre Last, named from the
-ancient town of Eastry (which may enshrine the
-name of the Saxon goddess of Spring, Eastre&mdash;whence
-our Easter, from the Christian festival
-coinciding in time with the heathen festival) was
-absorbed into the Lathe of S. Augustine.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Middletune</span> (Middeltuna both in the <i>Anglo-Saxon
-Chronicle</i> and in Domesday) is our Milton
-by Sittingbourne, and is said to be named from
-being the central town of Kent, as it was then
-populated and of importance.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_82">82</div>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Wiwarlet</span> (Wi-wara-lest), the lest of the
-people of Wye, together with Middletune,
-became later part of the Lathe of Sherwinhope
-(Scrawynghop, temp. Hen. 3, and Shewynghope
-1347). This name was later changed into that
-of Scray. What is the meaning of Sherwinhope?
-Hope in Saxon denotes a river valley,
-and Sands, in his <i>Memorials of Old Kent</i>,
-speaks of the brook Sherway, which falls into
-the Beult. But what of Scray?</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Limowart</span>, or Limea, denotes the people of
-Lymne, the old Roman Portus Lemanis, called
-Limene in 1291, then Lymene, Lymen 1396,
-Limne 1475, and Lymne 1480. I do not find
-the intrusive and erroneous p in the name earlier
-than 1504. The name was changed to Shippeway
-or Shipway, temp. Henry III., and a place
-in Lymne is still called Shipway Cross.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Sudtone</span>, <i>i.e.</i>, the town south of Dartford,
-distinguished from other Suttons by the later
-addition of &ldquo;at Hone,&rdquo; which is said to mean
-low in the valley.</p>
-<p class="tb"><span class="sc">Elesford</span>, our Aylesford, is so spelled in
-Domesday, but in the <i>Saxon Chronicle</i> it is
-Egelsford, and in Nennius Egisford. It may
-very well have been named by the Saxons after
-the Teutonic hero-archer or demigod Eigil,
-though the Celtic Eglwys, a church, has been
-suggested. It also appears as &AElig;gelesthrep, and
-for this a personal name (<i>e.g.</i>, Ecglaf), with
-threp or thorp for town has been suggested. But
-thorp we get from the Danes, and find chiefly
-in the N.E. There are none in Kent.</p>
-<p>The place-name difficulty, however, is intensified
-when we find, according to Lambarde
-in 1570, 13 Hundreds in S. Augustine&rsquo;s, 14 in
-Shepway, 18 in Scray, 14 in Aylesford, and 8 in
-Sutton-at-Hone, many of them being long
-obsolete names, such as Cornilo in S. Augustine&rsquo;s,
-Franchesse in Shepway, Calehill in
-<span class="pb" id="Page_83">83</span>
-Scray, Eythorde in Aylesford, and Coddeshethe
-in Sutton-at-Hone. And then in some places
-there are Half-Hundreds, which, however, did
-not exist before the reign of Edward II.</p>
-<p>As a matter of nearer local interest I may
-quote the divisions and assessments in the time
-of the Black Prince of the boroughs of the
-Hundred of Maydstone.</p>
-<table class="center">
-<tr class="th"><th> </th><th> </th><th class="r">&pound; </th><th class="r">s. </th><th class="r">d.</th></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Borough of Maydestone was assessed </td><td class="l">at </td><td class="r">19 </td><td class="r">9 </td><td class="r">2</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><span class="hst">Westre</span> (now West Borough) </td><td class="l">at </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">44 </td><td class="r">2</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><span class="hst">Stone</span> (now Stone St. Ward) </td><td class="l">at </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">78 </td><td class="r">2</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><span class="hst">Loose</span> </td><td class="l">at </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">34 </td><td class="r">4</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><span class="hst">Detlinge</span> </td><td class="l">at </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">58 </td><td class="r">4</td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="5" class="l">(These two villages were attached to Maidstone ecclesiastically until the reign of Elizabeth).</td></tr>
-<tr class="th"><th> </th><th> </th><th class="r">&pound; </th><th class="r">s. </th><th class="r">d.</th></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Lynton and Crookherst </td><td class="l">at </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">50 </td><td class="r">8</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">East Farleyghe </td><td class="l">at </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">45 </td><td class="r">1</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Boxley </td><td class="l">at </td><td class="r">4 </td><td class="r">3 </td><td class="r">4</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"> </td><td class="l">Sum </td><td class="r">&pound;38 </td><td class="r">18 </td><td class="r">3</td></tr>
-</table>
-<p>I do not understand the omission of the
-borough of Week or Wyke&mdash;whence Week
-Street&mdash;of which the old manor house still
-remains in Week Street, unless it was then
-included in Boxley.</p>
-<hr />
-<p>The study of the place-names of a county (as
-has been well done for our neighbour Sussex)
-mainly confines itself to the derivation and
-meaning of existing towns and villages, rivers,
-and hills, and I have done little more in these
-notes. But the subject is not then exhausted,
-for there is much of great interest to be gathered
-from the names of Hundreds, of Manors, and
-even of separate farms, and their consideration
-would largely extend the enquiry. For example,
-the Hundred Eyhorne in 1347 had the manors
-of Herbyltone (Harbledown in Harrietsham),
-Rissheforde in Hedcorne, Bromfield and Ledes,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_84">84</span>
-Sutton Valence, Olecombe, Heryetesham,
-Thorneham, Eynton, Bengebery, Wrensted,
-Frensted, Yoke, Wytchlinge, Aldington Septvance,
-Bocton, Malherbe-cum-Wormsell, Fokeham,
-Stockberye, Langele, Bygnor, Aldington
-Cobham, Otteham, B. Monchelsey alias Westboltone,
-West Farnebourne, Shelve in Lenham,
-Leneham, Downe, Berghestede, Bugeley,
-Cherletone, and Bressinge, many of these names
-being very unfamiliar now.</p>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p2.jpg" alt="decorative glyph" width="657" height="163" />
-</div>
-<h2>Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes</h2>
-<ul>
-<li>Silently corrected a few typos.</li>
-<li>Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.</li>
-<li>In the text versions only, text in <i>italics</i> is delimited by _underscores_.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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