Blyth: Difference between revisions

From International Robin Hood Bibliography
m (Text replacement - "VicinitySuffix=|" to "")
m (Text replacement - "<!-- {{ImgGalleryIntro}} <gallery widths="195px"> FOR EACH IMAGE: File:_FILENAME.jpg|_LEGEND / [_URL _PHOTOGRAPHER, _DAY _MON. _YEAR, Creative Commons.] </gallery>-->" to "")
Line 33: Line 33:




</div><!--
</div>
{{ImgGalleryIntro}}
<gallery widths="195px">
FOR EACH IMAGE: File:_FILENAME.jpg|_LEGEND / [_URL _PHOTOGRAPHER, _DAY _MON. _YEAR, Creative Commons.]
</gallery>-->


{{PnItemNav}}
{{PnItemNav}}

Revision as of 02:56, 18 December 2017

Template:PnItemTop

Loading map...
Blyth.
The Angel Inn / J. Thomas.
May Day at Hodsock priory, Blyth / TripAdvisor.com, uploaded by user George B.

By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-10-10. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2017-12-18.

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

Maps

Background

Also see

Notes


Template:PnItemNav