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A Dictionary of English Place Names
 
 
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A Dictionary of English Place Names [Hardcover]

A. D. Mills (Author)
2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

February 6, 1992
England's diverse and often odd-sounding place-names speak of thousands of years of history, reflecting conquest and migration, topography, local trades and agriculture, and changing customs. With over 12,000 informative entries, The Oxford Dictionary of English Place Names offers a unique path into this rich past of the English landscape, as read in local names.
Time and time again, the British Isles have been overrun by invading nations--the Romans, Saxons, Vikings, and Normans, to name a few--each leaving their language and locations etched into the countryside. The traces of these successive tongues can be heard in such places as Humber (pre-Celtic), York (Celtic), Lincoln (Latin), Scunthorpe (Scandanavian), Basingstoke (Old English), Devizes (French), and Broadstairs (Middle English). Chester, for example, began as a Roman military base, and originated as a latin word for a camp. Mills reveals how local names reflect such elements as the size of a place (as in Much Wenlock), its location (High Barnet), a local product (Saffron Walden), the tribe that settled there (Essex), natural features (Bromsgrove), or pre-Christian worship (Wednesbury).
This fascinating resource offers clear, concise entries that discuss the meaning and origin of these names, tracing their development from the earliest appearances to the present day. Mills provides earlier forms of each name, along with the earliest date and its spelling in the Domesday Book (William the Conqueror's famous survey of England) if it appears there. He also covers recent place-names and establishes the contemporary location of each site. Additional features include a select bibliography, maps of England's changing counties, and a helpful glossary of common elements in English place-names.
Covering cities and suburbs, towns and villages, counties and districts, rivers and coastlines, The Dictionary of English Place Names offers an authoritative reference and a unique historical tour through the English countryside. For readers interested in history, literature, or travel (armchair or otherwise), this volume will provide long hours of enjoyment.


Editorial Reviews

Review

  • Authoritative and up-to-date dictionary with wide coverage of place-names.
  • Includes counties, region, and rivers, tracing their development from early times to the present day.
  • Updated 2003 version with corrections

    --This text refers to the Kindle Edition edition.

    About the Author


    About the Author:
    A.D. Mills, retired Reader in English Language and Literature at Queen Mary College, London, is an acknowledged expert on place and personal names.

    Product Details

    • Hardcover: 424 pages
    • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA (February 6, 1992)
    • Language: English
    • ISBN-10: 0198691564
    • ISBN-13: 978-0198691563
    • Product Dimensions: 7.8 x 5.2 x 1.2 inches
    • Shipping Weight: 12.6 ounces
    • Average Customer Review: 2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
    • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #682,164 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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    11 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
    2.0 out of 5 stars He looks in only one direction for his etymologies, November 11, 2003
    For a while now, I have been noticing, to my displeasure, that the study of etymology - which ought to be a scholarly pursuit - is frequently motivated by a catch-all nationalism that seeks to ascribe as much as possible to a favoured language. For instance, in his recent DICTIONARY OF CLASSICAL WELSH LEGEND, Peter Bartrum tries, disastrously, to ascribe the obviously English name Gwenfrewi (Winifred) to Welsh origins; which is total nonsense. The same is true of this otherwise pleasant work of reference, which seems incapable of recognizing any word root that is not Anglo-Saxon. For instance: in the highly Romanized far south of the country, we find three villages in a valley (Latin UALLIS) Over, Middle and Nether Wallop. Listen to the desperate shifts to which Mills commits himself rather than suggest that the Valley of Wallop might have preserved a Latin root: "Possibly 'Valley with a spring or stream', Old English WELLA, WAELLA+HOP. Alternatively, the first element may be Old English WEALL 'a wall' or WALU 'a ridge, an embankment'." Not UALLIS, then? Uh-uh. Guess not. Even worse are the etymologies proposed for Costessey ("Island, or dry ground in marsh, of a man called *Cost"; the name being "Old English, or perhaps Scandinavian") or Antingham ("Homestead of the family or followers of a man called *Anta" - the strange "Anta" being ascribed without hesitation to Old English). Sir, I have two personal names for you: Constantine and Anthony. Is it really so difficult to imagine that they might have been known in post-Roman Britain? Place-name evidence shows that the conquering English allowed the conquered Britons certain amounts of land, some of which - the various Waltons - bear their ethnic name to this day. We also know that Latin names that did cross over into English tended to lose their final syllable - DUROVERNUM into DOR[CHESTER], AUGUSTA into AUST - and John Morris has made a credible suggestion that the Latin name AMBROSIUS survived in various Central and Southern English place-names in AMBER- ; Ambrosden, Amberley, Ambersham, Amblecote, Arminghall. So why should Costessey not pertain to the popular British name Constantine, or Antingham to an otherwise unknown Anthony - or indeed, for that matter, to an Antistes or Bishop? No reason at all, really; except the need to ascribe everything and his brother to the Anglo-Saxons, even at the cost of inventing AS names that are testified nowhere and make no sense whatever in Old English. The names I have singled out are only two out of dozens. Until Dr.Mills has uprooted the nationalism from his mind, I do not feel that I can conscientiously recommend this dictionary.
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