This thesis investigates the place-names of four parishes in Berwickshire and compares coastal and inland naming patterns. Berwickshire is a large county that borders on northern England and historically formed part of Anglo-Saxon Northumbria. Partly due to the survival of extensive archives from the medieval priory of Coldingham, preserved in Durham Cathedral Archives, this county holds some of Scotland’s earliest recorded place- names. The parishes that form the research area are grouped together in the north-east of the county. Two of these parishes, Abbey St Bathans and Bunkle & Preston, are inland, and two, Cockburnspath and Coldingham, have extensive coastlines. The diversity of this group of parishes allows a comparative study of the...
This thesis reflects on the value of the study of field-names in understanding the historic landscap...
The purpose of this paper is to highlight the value of Scottish place-name evidence as a tool for th...
The recent work of D. H. Green and others on the benefits of combining linguistic, archaeological an...
Recovering the Earliest English Language in Scotland: Evidence from place-names (REELS) is a researc...
This chapter presents a study of colour terms in the names of four parishes within the historic coun...
This resource has been created by the research project Recovering the Earliest English Language in S...
Old English is a collective term for a group of related dialects, some of which are better attested...
Old English is a collective term for a group of related dialects, some of which are better attested...
Place-Names in the Landscape (PNL, 1984), Margaret Gelling claims the high number of topographical e...
The following work is intended as a survey of Anglo-Saxon and Scandinavian place-name. material in ...
This thesis seeks to examine the place-names of six parishes in Caithness as recorded on the 611 Or...
This thesis investigates the minor and field-names of twenty-two parishes in Thurgarton Wapentake, a...
This thesis investigates the minor and field-names of twenty-two parishes in Thurgarton Wapentake, a...
This thesis investigates name giving in early modern Scotland through the collection and analysis of...
This thesis investigates the minor and field-names of twenty-two parishes in Thurgarton Wapentake, a...
This thesis reflects on the value of the study of field-names in understanding the historic landscap...
The purpose of this paper is to highlight the value of Scottish place-name evidence as a tool for th...
The recent work of D. H. Green and others on the benefits of combining linguistic, archaeological an...
Recovering the Earliest English Language in Scotland: Evidence from place-names (REELS) is a researc...
This chapter presents a study of colour terms in the names of four parishes within the historic coun...
This resource has been created by the research project Recovering the Earliest English Language in S...
Old English is a collective term for a group of related dialects, some of which are better attested...
Old English is a collective term for a group of related dialects, some of which are better attested...
Place-Names in the Landscape (PNL, 1984), Margaret Gelling claims the high number of topographical e...
The following work is intended as a survey of Anglo-Saxon and Scandinavian place-name. material in ...
This thesis seeks to examine the place-names of six parishes in Caithness as recorded on the 611 Or...
This thesis investigates the minor and field-names of twenty-two parishes in Thurgarton Wapentake, a...
This thesis investigates the minor and field-names of twenty-two parishes in Thurgarton Wapentake, a...
This thesis investigates name giving in early modern Scotland through the collection and analysis of...
This thesis investigates the minor and field-names of twenty-two parishes in Thurgarton Wapentake, a...
This thesis reflects on the value of the study of field-names in understanding the historic landscap...
The purpose of this paper is to highlight the value of Scottish place-name evidence as a tool for th...
The recent work of D. H. Green and others on the benefits of combining linguistic, archaeological an...