Eaglesfield, Cumberland

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Eaglesfield
Cumberland
Village green, Eaglesfield - geograph.org.uk - 759341.jpg
Village green, Eaglesfield
Location
Grid reference: NY094281
Location: 54°38’24"N, 3°24’11"W
Data
Post town: Cockermouth
Postcode: CA13
Dialling code: 01900
Local Government
Council: Cumberland
Parliamentary
constituency:
Copeland

Eaglesfield is a small village in Cumberland, near the A5086 road two and a half miles southwest of the town of Cockermouth.

Name

There are to main theories about the origin of Eaglesfield's name, neither of which involves eagles. The latter element is certainly from Old English meaning 'field' or 'open country' but the first element is uncertain.

One theory has it that 'Eagles' is derived from the ancient British language, from eccles meaning 'church' (cognate with the Welsh eglwys). It is suggested that the church would be something that the first English settlers would have seen as they "arrived and settled some two miles away down below at Brigham." [1]

An alternative is that the name means 'Ecgel's field' after an otherwise unrecorded landowner of the Anglo-Saxon period. 'Ecgel' as a personal name might be "a normal diminutive of compound names such as 'Ecglaf', or Ecgwulf'".[2]

Notable people

Eaglesfield was the probable birthplace of Robert de Eglesfield (c.1295–1349), founder of The Queen's College, Oxford. His father, John of Eglesfield, held lands in and near there.

John Dalton (1766–1844), acclaimed chemist, meteorologist and physicist was born in the village.

Moorland Close in Eaglesfield, was the birthplace of Fletcher Christian, master's mate aboard the HMS Bounty, who led the infamous mutiny against the captain, William Bligh, during their voyage from Tahiti.

Outside links

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References

  1. Wilson, P. A. (1978). "Eaglesfield". Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society. 2 LXXVIII: 47–54, p.47–48. 
  2. Armstrong, A.M. & Mawer; A.; Stenton, F.M. & Dickins, B.: 'Place-Names of Cumberland , Part 2' (English Place-Names Society, 1950), page 378