Blyth: Difference between revisions
From International Robin Hood Bibliography
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|data4 = [[pnvicinity::16 km SSE of [[Doncaster | |data4 = [[pnvicinity::16 km SSE of [[Doncaster]] | ||
|label5 = Type | |label5 = Type | ||
|data5=[[pntype::Settlement]] | |data5=[[pntype::Settlement]] |
Revision as of 17:57, 14 June 2017
{{Infobox
|header1=Locality |label2=Coordinates |data2=53.377072, -1.061938 |label3=Adm. div. |data3=Nottinghamshire |label4=Vicinity |data4 = [[pnvicinity::16 km SSE of Doncaster |label5 = Type |data5=Settlement |label6=Interest |data6=Literary locale |label7=Status |data7=Extant |label8=First Record |data8=c. 1500
}}
Blyth.
By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-10-10. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2017-06-14.
The north Nottinghamshire village of Blyth is mentioned twice in the Gest (see Evidence below). It is first mentioned in Domesday Book (1086), where it occurs as "Blide".[1] The village is located on the A1, the Great North Road. In the Middle Ages it was a rather more substantial town than now. It had two leper hospitals, a priory, three hermitages as well as markets and fairs. Of its former glory little now remains.[2]
Quotations
[c. 1500:]
My purpos was to have dyned to day
At Blith or Dancastere[3]
For better chepe I myght have dyned
In Blythe or in Dankastere[4]
Sources
- A Gest of Robyn Hode (Child 117), sts. 27, 259.
- Gover, J.E.B.; Mawer, Allen; Stenton, F.M. The Place-Names of Nottinghamshire (English Place-Name Society, vol. XVII) (Cambridge, 1940), pp. 68-69.
Maps
- O.S. 6" Nottinghamshire V.SE (1885; surveyed 1885)
- O.S. 6" Nottinghamshire V.SE (1900; rev. 1897)
- O.S. 6" Nottinghamshire V.SE (1922; rev. 1918)
- O.S. 6" Nottinghamshire V.SE (1950; rev. 1948).
Background
Also see
Notes