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Field research

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One of the attractions of researching landscape history is the opportunity to combine a range of sources of evidence: direct investigation in the field, archival documents, maps, aerial photography and satellite imagery, and the testimony of people both in the past and the present through their remembered experiences, art, stories and perceptions. When studying a largely agricultural landscape a rich coming together of all of these elements can be found in the seemingly prosaic study of the names given to individual fields and enclosures by those who have worked the land. 

This is of particular current interest to me as I am working through the tithe maps for one of my PhD case study areas, the cluster of medieval manors on the edge of the Black Mountains over which Llanthony Priory had lordship from the early twelfth century until its dissolution in the mid-sixteenth century. The production of tithe maps for most parishes and townships across England and Wales was a result of the Tithe Commutation Act of 1836 which sought to rationale the archaic system by which communities had to provide their local church with a tenth, a tithe, of their agricultural produce and related resources through the replacement of this ancient practise with its roots in the Anglo-Saxon period with a cash payment. In order to implement this change the Herculean task of establishing who owned and farmed what land had to be carried out so that the new payments in cash could be calculated, and thus an accurately surveyed map and accompanying apportionment schedule recording land-use, who owned what and who occupied which farmsteads down to every last field, acre, perch and rood was produced for each parish over the following twenty years or so. These magical remnants of typically Victorian thoroughness and efficiency provide a latter day'Domesday Book' snapshot of the agricultural landscape in the mid nineteenth century. A rich historical record that acts as an invaluable bridge between what we know about the 'in living memory' changes in the landscape over the last hundred years or so and the more dimly lit centuries that preceded the upheavals of the later nineteenth century.


Section of the tithe map for the parish of Upper Cwmyoy (showing Llanthony Priory), produced in 1852 (courtesy of http://cynefin.archiveswales.org.uk)
As they proceeded around each parish the tithe commissioners undertaking this exercise not only allocated a number to each field they mapped but also enquired of and recorded any names by which they were locally known, in order to reduce any ambiguity or confusion when the maps and schedules were examined by the farmers and land-owners of the parish. To the twenty-first century observer it is these field names that particularly help to bring the landscape of the time alive; though with some caveats: firstly not all fields had a name recorded (either because there was no such name, it may have been forgotten by or not be known to the current occupier or perhaps simply not followed up as the deadline for completing the survey loomed); and so, for some parishes, this data-set can be frustratingly incomplete. A more mundane characteristic of many field names is that they are often, well, rather mundane; for the very good reason that farmers did not allocate names to fields for the benefit of excitable landscape researchers and local historians, they did so to aid everyday working, communication and planning. Hence the proliferation of 'Big meadow', 'Field above the barn', 'Four acre field', 'Little croft' and many other similarly descriptive but rather uninspiring monikers. However, amongst this functionality can be found hidden gems that enrich our understanding of land management, landscape change, the vernacular lexicon of place words and terms and sometimes provide clues to the lost history of a particular patch of land.


Section of the tithe apportionment for the parish of Upper Cwmyoy (courtesy of http://cynefin.archiveswales.org.uk)
In my own research area there are many fields with a name but no number and no shortage of 'Upper meadow's, 'Lower orchard's, 'Big wood pasture's and the like. However, I have also found many leads to help provide a clearer picture of how the landscape has developed, with the added twist/ frustration that, hard on the border between England and Wales, some names are 'standard' English, some use Herefordshire dialect words, some are 'Gwentian' Welsh (a largely lost variation of Welsh from the south-east border area of the country), some a hybrid whilst others have morphed into strange corruptions of their original meaning, often through mishearing or incorrect transcribing on the part of those recording the information struggling to understand the mumbled or heavily accented oral testimony of the local farm workers.


'The Mote' field, Trefeddw farm.
This exercise has enabled my inner landscape detective to follow multiple pathways. The strange sounding name 'Poorcas' (or variations of) proliferates, mostly attached to large enclosures on the higher valley sides, and led to much initial head-scratching. A possible derivation is from the Welsh words por meaning pasture and cae for field: a finely-grained venacular descriptor for this topographically specific enclosure type. Other names are helping in the task of tracing the landscape of earlier times. For instance, within a field called 'The Mote' (pictured above) lies what remains of a motte and bailey fortification rising out of the fertile red earth, a remnant of the westward advance of Anglo-Norman control in this borderland region during the eleventh century which may be the foci of the medieval manor of Redcastle, now lost as a place name in local memory. A mile or so up the Vale of Ewyas lies the hamlet of Cwmyoy and within the cool stone of its quiet church can be found an impressively intact medieval cross with a carving of Christ still standing out in clear relief (pictured above). Local lore has it that this artifact was dug up from a local field over a hundred years ago. A few minutes walk from the church lies 'Cross field' (pictured below), under the turf of which the cross was perhaps hurriedly buried before the iconoclasts of the Reformation could bring their hammers to it, its likely original location further uphill at the cross roads of 'Groes Llwyd' (holy cross).    

'Cross field' occupying the rising ground below the hillside with the church of Cwmyoy behind the trees to the left.
On a more utilitarian note, a number of mills are recorded for Llanthony Priory's medieval manors in the area. The built remains of a number of later mills may occupy the location of an earlier manifestation, however the tithe maps provide further possible sites at 'Cae hen felin' (old mill field), 'Cae pandy' (fulling mill field) and 'Old mill meadow' that, when visited, provide field evidence of probable use as a mill; activity in the landscape long forgotten by the time the first edition Ordnance Survey map for the area, which makes no reference to any of these sites, was produced. Field names can also be used to help to piece together the routes through which people and livestock moved through the landscape before the modern metalled road network developed. Names such as 'Cae Rewen' (from rhiw meaning steep road field), 'Field above the road', and 'Whiels' (from heol meaning road) hint at the previous importance of now backwater field paths and tracks. One such holloway track, now disused, leads up to the common grazing land of the higher slopes of Hatterall Hill from a large field called 'Bugley meadow' (pictured below), a pleasant but incongruous sounding name until it is realised that this is probably a corruption of the old Welsh word for shepherd, bugail. This meadow, which visitors to Llanthony's ruins drive right past and also holds the annual Llanthony and District Show, contains an earthwork platform that may have been the site of the Priory's sheepcote for holding its flocks when they were brought down from their upland summer grazing. As for 'Caden will', 'Pic', 'Ropine' and 'Sole figin', their meaning remains mysterious; conversations with local farmers may illuminate some, but others are no doubt lost to history. 

'Bugley meadow', Court Farm, Llanthony
A listing of some of the more interesting or distinctive field name elements in the Llanthony area can be found in the table at the end of this piece (with some meanings still to be uncovered: if anyone can shed any light on these then please let me know).

Original tithe maps and apportionments are generally held at county and national archives and many are now digitised, with all for Wales available on the Archives Wales website.  

A particularly useful resource in the study of field names generally is provided by, the now out of print, English Field Names: A Dictionary by John Field (who else!). The book not only collects the many regional words for different types of enclosure but also demonstrates the more esoteric and playful side of naming different plots of agricultural land: 'Babylon' - remote land beyond the river; 'Chemistry' - land on which artificial fertilisers were used; 'Cocked hat' - land shaped like a tricorne hat; 'Lazy lands' - a derogatory term for unproductive land; 'Thousand Acre' - ironic term for small field; 'Unthank Bottom' - land occupied by squatters; and hundreds more such inventive names conjured by our clever but largely illiterate forebears, who knew the land around them literally by name. 


Field name element
Bach
Meaning
Little
Language
Welsh
Bank/ banky/ bancSlopeEnglish/ Welsh
Berrion/ errion/ errewanPossibly from y berllan = orchardWelsh
BeachBeach treesEnglish
BeakLand reclaimed for ploughingEnglish
BrakeWaste covered in brushwoodEnglish
BrinkPossibly from bryn = hillWelsh
Bagley/ bugleyFrom Bugail = shepherdWelsh
BushyLand covered in bushesEnglish
Caden will??
CaeFieldWelsh
CaerWall (or cae'r = field of the)Welsh
Canol/ cenolMiddleWelsh
CarnCrooked or stony hillockWelsh
CellanPossibly from celyn = hollyWelsh
Chwarel QuarryWelsh
CoedWoodWelsh
CommonCommon landEnglish
CoverOvergrown field for gameEnglish
Croft/ croftySmall enclosure near houseEnglish
CrookedCrookedEnglish
CrossCrossEnglish
CrowCrowEnglish
CwmValleyWelsh
Cwrgy Cwr = edge or cwar = quarryWelsh
DarrenRocky cliffWelsh
DavidPossibly from dafad = sheepWelsh?
DelynFrom telyn = harpWelsh
DingleDeep wooded hollowEnglish
Dol/ dole/ dolu/ dolauMeadowWelsh
DrainingWell drainedEnglish
Duelt Possibly from ddu = black, dark + allt = woody cliffWelsh
Errion/ errewen/ errule/ erewinPossibly from y rhiw = steep path, hillside or slopeWelsh
FarthingFourth partEnglish
Fawr/ vawrGreatWelsh
ffynon/ ffennoSpring or wellWelsh
FinePossibly from ffynon = spring or wellWelsh?
Fierben???
FlatFlatEnglish
Garrivel Possibly from chwarel = quarryWelsh
Garw/ GwrwRoughWelsh
GlasNotably green or marshyWelsh
Glwydd Bank or ditchWelsh
Gorgy??
GrazingGrazingEnglish
GreenNotably green or marshyEnglish
GronePossibly from gronyn = grainWelsh
GrosPossibly from groes = crossWelsh
Gruffdupin??
GuntersLocal personal nameWelsh
Gwillen/ guillenPossibly from Gwillim personal nameWelsh
GwynWhiteWelsh
Holly/ HolleysHolly treeEnglish
HorseLand on which horses are keptEnglish
HorsleyPossibly land on which horses are keptEnglish?
Isha/ IsserLowerWelsh
KilnLime kilnEnglish
Leak?English
LluadduPossibly from lludw = ashWelsh
LlwydBrown or greyWelsh
LoneyPossibly from llwyn = groveWelsh?
Loom??
MaesMeadow, field or ploughed landWelsh
MarkelPossibly from mark = boundary?
MawrBig, great or largeWelsh
MellinFrom melin = millWelsh
NantStreamWelsh
NarrowNarrow strip of landEnglish
New ground Land newly cultivated or enclosedEnglish
Newydd NewWelsh
OakOak treeEnglish
Old woodPreviously wooded landEnglish
OrchardOrchardEnglish
OrlesLand on which alders growWelsh
OxOxenEnglish
PandyFulling millWelsh
ParkParklandEnglish
PasturePastureEnglish
PatchSmall piece of landEnglish
Peck??
PenEnd or top (W), or small enclosure (Eng)?
Penheadend or top headHybrid
Perkins??
Perrott/ PerrowLocal personal nameWelsh
PerthyHedge or bushWelsh
Pic??
PiecePiece of landEnglish
PikeyPointed piece of landEnglish
PinFir or pine, or pin, or penWelsh
Pistil/ pisty/ pestaeFrom pistyll = spout or cataractWelsh
Pleck/ plockSmall piece of landEnglish
PlotSmall piece of ground or allotmentEnglish
Pool/ poolePool or pondEnglish
Poorcas/ porkin/ pulcas/ puscas/ porking/ poorcatPossibly from Por = pasture or grass + cae = field, or poor field? Most tend to be large enclosures of pasture on higher slopeWelsh
PorthGateWelsh
Put??
PwillenPossibly from pwll = pit, pool or pondWelsh
QueerUnusual?English
RestreePossibly from rhes = line or rowWelsh
Rick/ rickhole/ ricketHay rickEnglish
RiderPossibly from rhyd = fordWelsh
Rocks hillRocky landEnglish
Ropin/ ropine??
RottenPoor qualityEnglish
SalpotPossibly from sallow = willow + pot = deep hole, land covered in holesEnglish
SerthSteepWelsh
Sheckwell?English
Sheep walkUpland sheep pastureEnglish
ShopShedEnglish
Skybor/ scyborFrom ysgabor = barnWelsh
SlangNarrow strip of landEnglish
Slip/ slipperSmall strip of landEnglish
SlottickPossibly from silotog = productive, abounding in seedlings?
Sole figin??
Soundr??
SquareSquareEnglish
TilleyPossibly from tillage = land enclosed for arable use; Or corruption of name of nearby farmstead of Tylau?
Tir/ tyrLandWelsh
Troustree? + possibly tri = three?
Tump/ tumpyHillockEnglish
TyHouseWelsh
TyleSlope, hillWelsh
TyningLand enclosed with a fenceEnglish
Ucha/ ushafUpperWelsh
WarPossibly from gwar = aboveWelsh
WarhealPossibly from gwar = above + heol = roadWelsh
WarrenRabbit warrenEnglish
WellLand by or with a well or springEnglish
WernElder trees or wateryWelsh
WhielsPossibly from heol = roadWelsh?
Whirrell From chwarel = quarryWelsh
WeirLand by a weirEnglish
WillPossibly from heol = roadWelsh?
Worlod/ wolod/ walod/ gwrlodMeadowWelsh
Yew TreeYew treeEnglish
Ynis/ ynysWater meadow, rising ground or islandWelsh





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