Lincolnshire place-names: Difference between revisions

From International Robin Hood Bibliography
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{{PnAdmDivLandingSMW|Country=England|Demonym=English|AdmDiv=Lincolnshire|Abbrev=Lincs|Area=6853.541554|Population=380487|Lat=53.17286196763841|Lon=-0.3011798858642578|CenterLat=53.1768071412575|CenterLon=-0.3007766685857315|Zoom=8}}
{{PlaceNamesAdministrativeDivision|Country=England|Demonym=English|AdministrativeDivision=Lincolnshire|Abbrev=Lincs|Area=7190.203586|Population=208625‬|Lat=53.17286196763841|Lon=-0.3011798858642578|CenterLat=53.1768071412575|CenterLon=-0.3007766685857315|Zoom=8}}<div class="no-img">
<p id="byline">By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-06-19. Revised by {{#realname:{{REVISIONUSER}}}}, {{REVISIONYEAR}}-{{REVISIONMONTH}}-{{REVISIONDAY2}}.</p>
<p id="byline">By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-06-19. Revised by {{#realname:{{REVISIONUSER}}}}, {{REVISIONYEAR}}-{{REVISIONMONTH}}-{{REVISIONDAY2}}.</p>
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<div class="blockthorny"><p>Lincolnshire is a large county; in England the biggest after Yorkshire. It is divided into the three parts; Holland (the southwest), Kesteven (the southeast) and Lindsey (the north). The county lies along the North Sea coast and extends from the Humber estuary in the north to Cambridgeshire and Northamptonshire in the south. The North Sea coast runs into the sea with long tidal mudflats and sandy beaches for its whole length, so that the tide may run out a mile from where the map shows. The southern end of the county's coast is part of the Wash. Lincolnshire is mainly flat with a great deal of drained fenland particularly in the south of the county. There is one remarkable range of hills; the Lincoln Edge, a narrow ridge which runs in a straight line almost due north for some forty miles, through Lincoln and on, though "the Heights" as it is known, will rarely reach even 200 feet above sea level. Only the Lincolnshire Wolds in western Lindsey and the hills spreading out of Leicestershire into Kesteven have any claim to altitude. The land of Lincolnshire is rich arable land. The City of Lincoln stands on the Lincoln Edge, tumbling down to the River Withan and up again. It is a city of mediæval charm, with a great castle at its peak. At the northern edge of the county are the Humber towns, Scarborough and Grimsby. Both are port towns. Immingham too, near Grimsby, is a main port for the Norwegian trade. At the very opposite end, on the southern border with Northamptonshire, Stamford is a jewel built in rich Barnack rag stone, which has made it every producer's favourite regency film set.</p>
<div class="blockthorny"><p>Lincolnshire is a large county; in England the biggest after Yorkshire. It is divided into the three parts; Holland (the southwest), Kesteven (the southeast) and Lindsey (the north). The county lies along the North Sea coast and extends from the Humber estuary in the north to Cambridgeshire and Northamptonshire in the south. The North Sea coast runs into the sea with long tidal mudflats and sandy beaches for its whole length, so that the tide may run out a mile from where the map shows. The southern end of the county's coast is part of the Wash. Lincolnshire is mainly flat with a great deal of drained fenland particularly in the south of the county. There is one remarkable range of hills; the Lincoln Edge, a narrow ridge which runs in a straight line almost due north for some forty miles, through Lincoln and on, though "the Heights" as it is known, will rarely reach even 200 feet above sea level. Only the Lincolnshire Wolds in western Lindsey and the hills spreading out of Leicestershire into Kesteven have any claim to altitude. The land of Lincolnshire is rich arable land. The City of Lincoln stands on the Lincoln Edge, tumbling down to the River Withan and up again. It is a city of mediæval charm, with a great castle at its peak. At the northern edge of the county are the Humber towns, Scarborough and Grimsby. Both are port towns. Immingham too, near Grimsby, is a main port for the Norwegian trade. At the very opposite end, on the southern border with Northamptonshire, Stamford is a jewel built in rich Barnack rag stone, which has made it every producer's favourite regency film set.</p>
<p>'''Main Towns:''' Boston, Bourne, Cleethorpes, Gainsborough, Grantham, Grimsby, Holbeach, Lincoln, Louth, Scunthorpe, Spalding, Stamford.<br/>'''Main Rivers:''' Trent, Welland, Ancholme, Witham, Brant, Glen, Bain, Steeping.<br/>'''Highlights:''' Boston Stump; Carr Dyke, Bourne; Lincoln Cathedral; Skegness; Tattersall Castle; the Wolds.<br/>'''Highest Point:''' Normanby Top, The Wold, {{FeetToM|551}} m.<br/>'''Area:''' {{SquareMilesToKm2|2646}} km<sup>2</sup>.<ref>[http://www.county-borders.co.uk/ The Historic Counties Trust] has kindly allowed me to quote its [http://www.county-borders.co.uk/historiccountiestrust/descriptions.html county descriptions] ''in toto''. I have converted square miles to km<sup>2</sup> and feet to meters.</ref></p></div>
<p>'''Main Towns:''' Boston, Bourne, Cleethorpes, Gainsborough, Grantham, Grimsby, Holbeach, Lincoln, Louth, Scunthorpe, Spalding, Stamford.<br/>'''Main Rivers:''' Trent, Welland, Ancholme, Witham, Brant, Glen, Bain, Steeping.<br/>'''Highlights:''' Boston Stump; Carr Dyke, Bourne; Lincoln Cathedral; Skegness; Tattersall Castle; the Wolds.<br/>'''Highest Point:''' Normanby Top, The Wold, {{FeetToM|551}} m.<br/>'''Area:''' {{SquareMilesToKm2|2646}} km<sup>2</sup>.<ref>[http://www.county-borders.co.uk/ The Historic Counties Trust] has kindly allowed me to quote its [http://www.county-borders.co.uk/historiccountiestrust/descriptions.html county descriptions] ''in toto''. We have converted square miles to km<sup>2</sup> and feet to meters.</ref></p></div>


{{PnAdmDivChronology}}
{{PlaceNamesAdministrativeDivisionChronology}}
== Lists and gazetteers ==
== Lists and gazetteers ==
* Nothing in {{:Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a}}, pp. 293-311
* Nothing in {{:Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a}}, pp. 293-311
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* [http://www.county-borders.co.uk/historiccountiestrust/descriptions.html The Historic Counties Trust: Historic Counties Descriptions]
* [http://www.county-borders.co.uk/historiccountiestrust/descriptions.html The Historic Counties Trust: Historic Counties Descriptions]
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lincolnshire Wikipedia: Lincolnshire].
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lincolnshire Wikipedia: Lincolnshire].
== Neighbours ==
* [[Cambridgeshire place-names|Cambridgeshire]]
* [[East Riding of Yorkshire place-names|East Riding of Yorkshire]]
* [[Leicestershire place-names|Leicestershire]]
* [[Norfolk place-names|Norfolk]]
* [[Northamptonshire place-names|Northamptonshire]]
* [[Nottinghamshire place-names|Nottinghamshire]]
* [[Rutland place-names|Rutland]]
* [[West Riding of Yorkshire place-names|West Riding of Yorkshire]]
* [[Yorkshire place-names|Yorkshire.]]


== Notes ==
== Notes ==
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Latest revision as of 05:06, 27 May 2022

Adm. div.
Full name Lincolnshire
Abbreviation Lincs
Coordinate 53.172862, -0.30118
Area (1801) 7190.203586 km2[1]
Population (1801) 208625[1]
Loading map...
Localities named after Robin Hood (or members of his band) in Lincolnshire. Click cluster marker for locality markers. Click locality marker for link to page. Historical county boundary co­ordi­nates provided by the Historic Counties Trust.
Viewing choropleth • View choropleth • View choropleth • About the choropleths. County boundary data provided by the Historic Counties Trust.

"Area","Settlement","Establishment","Thoroughfare","Thoroughfare","Establishment","Thoroughfare","Thoroughfare","Establishment","Establishment","Thoroughfare","Thoroughfare","Area","Area","Public house","Public house","Public house","Transport","Public house","Establishment","Building","Area","Thoroughfare","Miscellaneous","Public house","Monument","Thoroughfare","Natural feature","Thoroughfare","Thoroughfare",

"","","20th","","","20th","","","21st","20th","","","","","19th","19th","19th","","19th","20th","19th","21st","","21st","19th","16th","17th","19th","","",

"Literary locale","Miscellaneous","Robin Hood name","Robin Hood name","Miscellaneous","Robin Hood name","Robin Hood name","Robin Hood name","Robin Hood name","Robin Hood name","Robin Hood name","Robin Hood name","Literary locale","Literary locale","Robin Hood name","Robin Hood name","Robin Hood name","Robin Hood name","Robin Hood name","Robin Hood name","Robin Hood name","Robin Hood name","Robin Hood name","Robin Hood name","Robin Hood name","Robin Hood name","Robin Hood name","Robin Hood name","Robin Hood name","Miscellaneous",

"Defunct","Extant","Defunct","Extant","Extant","Defunct","Extant","Extant","Extant","Defunct","Extant","Extant","Defunct","Defunct","Extant","Defunct","Defunct","Defunct","Extant","Extant","Defunct","Extant","Extant","Extant","Extant","Defunct","Extant","Extant","Extant","Extant",

Friar Way (Boston)¤|Greenwood Drive (Boston)¤|Little John Arcade (Chapel St Leonards)¤|Little John Street (Grimsby)¤|Locksley Close (Boston)¤|Marian Road (Boston)¤|Marian Road (Skegness)¤|Robin Hood (River Trent)¤|Robin Hood Parking (Boston)¤|Robin Hood Road (Skegness)¤|Robin Hood Soul Club (Boston)¤|Sheriff Way (Boston)¤|Sherwood Avenue (Boston)¤|Robin Hood's Cross (Aunby)¤1524|Robin Hood's Walk (Boston)¤1640|Plumpton Park (Stow) (1)¤1839|Plumpton Park (Stow) (2)¤1839|Eagle Barnsdale¤1841|Robin Hood and Little John (Aslackby)¤1846|Barnesdales (Sixhills)¤1847|Robin Hood (Boston)¤1861|Robin Hood (Lincoln)¤1861|Robin Hood (Grimsby)¤1871|Robin Hood's Well (Laughton)¤1886|Robin Hood Cottages (Skegness)¤1887|Robin Hood (Spalding)¤1888|Friar Tuck Shop (Chapel St Leonards)¤1958|Robin Hood Camp (Chapel St Leonards)¤1958|Maid Marion Club (Chapel St Leonards)¤1973|Maid Marian Pub (Chapel St Leonards)¤2009|

By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-06-19. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2022-05-27.

Flag-lincolnshire.png

County description

The Historic Counties Trust describes Lincolnshire as follows:

Lincolnshire is a large county; in England the biggest after Yorkshire. It is divided into the three parts; Holland (the southwest), Kesteven (the southeast) and Lindsey (the north). The county lies along the North Sea coast and extends from the Humber estuary in the north to Cambridgeshire and Northamptonshire in the south. The North Sea coast runs into the sea with long tidal mudflats and sandy beaches for its whole length, so that the tide may run out a mile from where the map shows. The southern end of the county's coast is part of the Wash. Lincolnshire is mainly flat with a great deal of drained fenland particularly in the south of the county. There is one remarkable range of hills; the Lincoln Edge, a narrow ridge which runs in a straight line almost due north for some forty miles, through Lincoln and on, though "the Heights" as it is known, will rarely reach even 200 feet above sea level. Only the Lincolnshire Wolds in western Lindsey and the hills spreading out of Leicestershire into Kesteven have any claim to altitude. The land of Lincolnshire is rich arable land. The City of Lincoln stands on the Lincoln Edge, tumbling down to the River Withan and up again. It is a city of mediæval charm, with a great castle at its peak. At the northern edge of the county are the Humber towns, Scarborough and Grimsby. Both are port towns. Immingham too, near Grimsby, is a main port for the Norwegian trade. At the very opposite end, on the southern border with Northamptonshire, Stamford is a jewel built in rich Barnack rag stone, which has made it every producer's favourite regency film set.

Main Towns: Boston, Bourne, Cleethorpes, Gainsborough, Grantham, Grimsby, Holbeach, Lincoln, Louth, Scunthorpe, Spalding, Stamford.
Main Rivers: Trent, Welland, Ancholme, Witham, Brant, Glen, Bain, Steeping.
Highlights: Boston Stump; Carr Dyke, Bourne; Lincoln Cathedral; Skegness; Tattersall Castle; the Wolds.
Highest Point: Normanby Top, The Wold, 167.94 m.
Area: 6853.11 km2.[2]

Chronology

16th Century

1 Robin Hood-related place-name first documented in the 16th century.

17th Century

1 Robin Hood-related place-name first documented in the 17th century.

19th Century

7 Robin Hood-related place-names first documented in the 19th century.

20th Century

4 Robin Hood-related place-names first documented in the 20th century.

21st Century

3 Robin Hood-related place-names first documented in the 21st century.

Literary locales

3 Literary locales.

Miscellaneous

3 Miscellaneous place-names and localities.

All localities

30 Place-names and localities.

Place-name clusters

4 Clusters of Robin Hood place-names, localities with local traditions, literary locales etc.

Lists and gazetteers

Background

Neighbours

Notes