Difference between revisions of "Winchcombeshire"

From Wikishire
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with "'''Winchcombeshire''' was anciently and for an unknown period accounted a county of England, but which is today the western half of Gloucestershire, within the Cotswold ...")
 
m
 
Line 3: Line 3:
 
Very little is known of Winchcombeshire.  Suddenly in 1007 records mention a "Winchcombeshire", and then in 1016 it was gone, merged with Gloucestershire.  It was ended not by the King but by the notorious Earl Eadric Streona, its demise mourned by a chronicler of the time.   
 
Very little is known of Winchcombeshire.  Suddenly in 1007 records mention a "Winchcombeshire", and then in 1016 it was gone, merged with Gloucestershire.  It was ended not by the King but by the notorious Earl Eadric Streona, its demise mourned by a chronicler of the time.   
  
The place is named ''Wincelcumbescir'' in Old English, and it was named after the town at it heart, [[Winchcombe]] (known in Old English as 'Wincelcumbe'', a name meaning "Corner valley").  The abolition of Winchcombshire was put down by later historians as one of Eadric's ill deeds, singled out amongst his many treacheries.
+
The place is named ''Wincelcumbescir'' in Old English, and it was named after the town at it heart, [[Winchcombe]] (known in Old English as ''Wincelcumbe'', a name meaning "Corner valley").  The abolition of Winchcombshire was put down by later historians as one of Eadric's ill deeds, singled out amongst his many treacheries.
  
 
==Further reading==
 
==Further reading==

Latest revision as of 11:16, 5 December 2020

Winchcombeshire was anciently and for an unknown period accounted a county of England, but which is today the western half of Gloucestershire, within the Cotswold Hills.

Very little is known of Winchcombeshire. Suddenly in 1007 records mention a "Winchcombeshire", and then in 1016 it was gone, merged with Gloucestershire. It was ended not by the King but by the notorious Earl Eadric Streona, its demise mourned by a chronicler of the time.

The place is named Wincelcumbescir in Old English, and it was named after the town at it heart, Winchcombe (known in Old English as Wincelcumbe, a name meaning "Corner valley"). The abolition of Winchcombshire was put down by later historians as one of Eadric's ill deeds, singled out amongst his many treacheries.

Further reading

  • Whybra, Julian, A Lost English County: Winchcombeshire in the Tenth and Eleventh Centuries. (Studies in Anglo-Saxon History, 1). Boydell & Brewer, Woodbridge, 1990. ISBN 0-85115-500-6