Huntingdonshire place-names

From International Robin Hood Bibliography
Revision as of 21:18, 15 June 2017 by Henryfunk (talk | contribs)

Template:PnAdmDivLandingSMW

By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-07-08. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2017-06-15.

Flag-huntingdonshire.png

County description

The Historic Counties Trust describes Huntingdonshire as follows:

One of the smallest of the counties, Huntingdonshire is a county of pretty little villages, with no major towns until the Peterborough suburbs at the county's northern fringe. It lies between Cambridgeshire to the east and Northamptonshire and Bedforshire on the west. Huntingdonshire is roughly rhomboid in shape, centered on Huntingdon, and the meeting of the Great North Road (now the A1) and the route from east coast to the Midland towns, now the A14. The four towns of Huntingdonshire are St Neots, St Ives, Ramsey and Huntingdon itself; three mediæval abbey towns and the fortress of the Ouse. Huntingdonshire is almost entirely flat. The south of the county is a network of villages surrounded by mixed farming. North of Huntingdon the land lies within the Great Fen, long since drained and converted into broad, fertile arable fields. Much of the land is below sea level. The main town of the fens is Ramsey. The Great Ouse enters Huntingdonshire at St Neots, the largest town in the county, and flows past Huntingdon and St Ives until the border with Cambridgeshire. The course of the river in Huntingdonshire is where the river shows its greatest beauty. Huntingdonshire is mainly agricultural, though with much light industry and computer technology companies, and around Huntingdon in particular road haulage thrives due to the county's position.

Main Towns: Huntingdon, Kilbolton, Godmanchester, St Ives, St Neots.
Main Rivers: Nene, Ouse, Kym.
Highlights: Cromwell's Birthplace and Cromwell Museum, Huntingdon; Flag Fen; Old Fletton.
Highest Point: Field (near Three Shire Stone), 80.16 m.
Area: 929.81 km.[1]

Chronology

Unknown century

Robin Hood-related place-names whose century of first occurrence is unknown.

All localities

List and Gazetters

Background

Notes

  1. The Historic Counties Trust has kindly allowed me to quote its county descriptions in toto. I have converted square miles to km2 and feet to m. Abbreviations may have been silently expanded