A History of BIRMINGHAM Places & Placenames . . . from A to Y

William Dargue - A History of Birmingham Places & Placenames . . . from A to Y

About this Site

This website is a rearrangement of material that I compiled for my History of  Birmingham on Your Doorstep. This is an electronic document that I started working on many years ago, but which was first published in July 2000 on the Birmingham Grid for Learning website William Dargue's History of Birmingham on Your Doorstep.

 

I uploaded the bulk of the material onto this website June-August 2008.

 

I have just finished checking all the entries in the Placenames Gazetteer, making corrections and adding photographs and old OS maps.

I never quite finished writing the Walk up New Street in the Birmingham, and that page needs to be split into smaller pages for faster downloads. And I also need to go through the Brief Histories and the Glossary. And I continue to find minor placenames to include. It's a good job I only work part-time now!

 

You can recognise 'finished' articles by the addition of my name and date at the bottom.

 

William Dargue April 2009

 

Notes

  • This document covers the City of Birmingham Metropolitan District, but also some significant nearby localities outside the city.

  • Many of our placenames originate with the Anglo-Saxons. The terms Angle, Anglian and Saxon refer to closely related peoples originating in northern Holland, north-west Germany and southern Denmark who spoke mutually comprehensible dialects of the same language. Angles made their way to the West Midlands from the east via the Tame valley; the (West) Saxons came from the south via the Severn valley.

  • The usual term for the early medieval language is Old English, though it may be referred to as Anglo-Saxon. By the Middle Ages Old English evolved into Middle English, the language of Chaucer, and by Tudor times into early Modern English, the language of Shakespeare. Old English words are printed in italics, their translation between inverted commas.

  • Where known, the earliest documented date of each placename is given. However, placenames predate the first surviving record by many years. Some of the earliest records of placenames are found in surnames eg. Hugh de la Haye who was recorded in 1171 provides the first reference to the Hay in Hay Mills. Hugh had taken his name from the place where he lived.

  • Apostrophes are omitted in placenames.