It doesn’t take a genius to work out how Newcastle-upon-Tyne
got its name. But what about its many suburbs? These were all originally
settlements in their own right but have long-since been swallowed up by the
sprawling city.
Benton/Longbenton
– Old English (OE) beonet- or bean-tun, hence ‘course/bent grass
farm’ or ‘bean-farm’ (we’re not sure which). In time, two settlements grew –
‘Long-’ and ‘Little-’;
Benwell – OE bionnan walle, meaning ‘place inside the
(Roman) wall’. Not a well in sight;
Blakelaw – Old
Norse = ‘black hill’;
Byker – Again,
probably Old Norse by-kiarr, which
means ‘the village marsh’;
Elswick – OE
‘Aelfsige’s (diary) farm’;
Fawdon – Again
OE, from fag-dun, meaning ‘multicoloured
hill’;
Fenham – A slightly
tricky one. Certainly OE, but could mean ‘place at the fens’ or ‘(water-)
meadow by the fen’;
Gosforth – OE
meaning, literally, ‘goose-ford’, i.e. the ford where there are geese;
Heaton – OE for
‘high farm/settlement’;
Jesmond – An
interesting one, this. Seems to mean ‘Ouse mouth’ – the Ouse being the river
that runs through the area and whose confluence with the Tyne
is a little to the south. Both elements (‘Ouse’ and ‘mouth’) have been
corrupted to ‘Jes’ and ‘mond’ under French/Norman influence. Or so the
academics tell us.
Part 2 next week…