Wold Newton and Octon both have the Old English suffix -ton, meaning 'village', 'estate' or 'farmstead', whereas Thwing may be derived from the Old Norse Thvengr, meaning 'narrow strip of land'. He said: “The Vikings generally founded new places when they arrived in south west Lancashire and the Wirral, but if there were English place names they … I have a great Grandmother from Liverpool, named Julia Melling, her Father was Stephen Melling. • Scarborough: the stronghold of Skarth. The majority of locations in England named by the Vikings reside in the area that used to be known as the Danelaw, the place where Danish rule was concentrated in the 9th Century. Words describing features and details of the landscape were also common. Privacy Policy. It’s important to remember in York: Bar means Gate, and Gate means Street. Based on the Marvel Comics series, the film sees the titular Norse God brought into today's society before becoming on the Avengers, a group of superheroes who must protect Earth.

Those who settled along the east coast were primarily Danish, while those settling on the north west coast were made up mainly of Norwegians. Formby Civic Society is a registered Charity (No. from Bill’s home village - Meols, near Hoylake. ‘Thorp’ was another suffix added to place names by the Scandinavians, and meant ‘secondary village’ or a village of less importance than another close by. Terms of Use  |   The differences between these two cultures resulted in a few differences in their naming traditions.

I am originally from Liverpool but living in Australia now. Norse names originates from the Scandinavian and North Germanic mythology, dating back to the middle ages. Example Slaithwaite (Huddersfield) As part of that series 2000 men were tested to see Langthwaite means ‘long clearing’, Selby means ‘the Village with Willows’, and Ellerton means ‘farmstead near alder trees’. The British Museum website has created a map where you are able to discover Norse placenames near where you live.

The many origins and back-stories to the place names of Yorkshire and beyond show that, despite a thousand years of history, time has not managed to obliterate the Viking’s legacy.

Aside from thorpe, ‘thwaite’ was commonly used in Viking place names.

Thwaite comes from the Norse thveit, meaning a clearing or meadow.

The land covered a vast area, drawing a line diagonally across the country from London up to Bedford, then following the old Roman road of Watling Street. This is consistent with the historical and place-name evidence for greater Viking presence in Wirral and West Lancashire than in Mid-Cheshire.

• -thwaite: originally thveit, woodland clearing. Latin Language & its Vicinities.

This has been confirmed by the vast amount of wooden objects found in The Coppergate Dig, alongside wood shavings and tools.

The street where JORVIK is located, Coppergate, comes from its Viking name, Koppari-Gata. III Scandinavians in Lancashire. Photo by David Dunn, Winter sunshine on the golden sand on Formby beach on the Sefton coast and the long shadow from this washed up tree.

roots, the evidence for significant Viking influence in Merseyside and West Lancashire . Luckily, in Sefton and West Lancashire we have a number of places that have a Norse name.

Was this a sheer coincidence, or is there something about the history of Merseyside, However, there were some places named after people who lived there. Thorpe could also be used with a direction, e.g.

• Sheffield: field by the River Sheaf Bill Housley from the Wirral as one of the best examples of a match with men surveyed

Luckily, in Sefton and West Lancashire we have a number of places that have a Norse name. genetics have made it possible not just to discover where our ancestors lived (and My Wolstoncrft’s lived in Bolton area as early as mid-1500’s , we also have the clawhand contracture. in our genetic code and reveals how developments in the cutting-, Was this a sheer coincidence, or is there something about the history of Merseyside,