Here’s another batch of place-name meanings from the
outlying areas of Newcastle …
Kenton – From the
Old English (OE) cyne-tun, meaning
‘royal manor/farmstead’. The identity of the Anglo-Saxon nobleman is unknown;
Killingworth – OE
in origin, meaning ‘the enclosed farmstead of Cylla’s people’;
Lemington – From
OE hleomoc-tun, which means the
‘farmstead/settlement where brook-lime grows’ (a type of herb, aka speedwell);
Newburn – Nothing
to do with a ‘burn’, but rather from the OE meaning ‘new burgh/fort’;
Scotswood – Richard
Scot began enclosing the wood west of Benwell at this spot in 1367 – hence
‘Scot’s Wood’;
Shieldfield – A
field with shielings (huts) in it;
Wallsend – Literally,
the ‘wall’s end’ (i.e. the Roman Wall);
Westerhope – Generally
thought to be from the OE, meaning ‘whetstone valley’ (perhaps a quarry?);
Wingrove – No one
seems too sure about this one, but it may be OE in origin, meaning ‘the grove
(group of trees) of wiga’s followers’ (or someone similar).
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