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The Background:
It's not precisely know when the Saxons began to
organize the landscape on the
open field principal.
Certainly by the late 9th century manorial records
indicate farming was taking place on the central plains of
England with the village as the nucleus of the medieval economy.
As England's population expanded more villages were created and
more land brought under cultivation with new fields, pastures
and meadows carved from the nearby woods.
The Saxons employed an extensive topographical vocabulary to
denote features of the landscape and woodlands were no
exception. In some instances the terms reflect regional dialect,
in others, subtle nuances as to the nature or function of the
woodland. Consequently village names derived from the woodland
reflect a rich diversity of form. Suffixes such as
ley hurst, shaw, and wood were
commonly used. Species of trees,
Oak, Ash, Elm, were frequently appended to form place names or
features of the landscape.
While the village system was largely in place by the time of
the Norman conquest, the role of the forest would grow in
importance as it served as a source of income, game and
recreation for the Norman aristocracy. Eventually “Royal
Forests” would be established which, at their greatest extent,
would cover approximately
1/3 of the English landscape. While the Royal
Forests were not entirely woodlands, forest law greatly
restricted and prescribed their use and exploitation.
From the 11th through the early 14th century, England
experienced climatic warming and an acceleration of population
growth. Estimates suggest more than a doubling of population
occurred during this period. A further expansion of the
village system into the adjacent woods was needed to accommodate
this growth. As this was precisely the time during which
surnames were being widely adopted, it should not be surprising
that surnames derived from the woodlands or from settlements
named for woods, were common.
Geographic Stability:
A notable characteristic of many surnames is their geographic
stability. In many instances present day surname
distributions are found in
close proximity to their point of origin, often within a few
miles of the village or feature after which they were named.
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Cary
1787: Part of Hertfordshire showing parks and woods |
But what of surnames derived from the ancient woodlands? In
order to examine the degree to which surname distributions are
geographically associated with the woodlands, we would first
need to know the extent of woodlands at the time surnames were
formed. The task of determining the distribution of woodlands was first
undertaken by a remarkable young woman, Hilda Annie Wilcox. In
1927 as a Masters student at Liverpool University, Wilcox began
the complex task of mapping the Ancient Woodland. Her
methodology was ingenious. Wilcox, would not only construct one
map, she would construct two. Each would be based on entirely
different sources of data, therefore, one could be used to act
as a check against the other. The first would
rely on English places names and references drawn from
the Domesday Book. The second would assemble data drawn from
17th and 18th century county
maps. This latter map has been studied by Brian K.
Roberts and found to be remarkably consistent with our
contemporary understanding of the ancient woodland. The work of
Wilcox was followed beginning in the 1950’s by Darby (1952 -
77), and later an Atlas of Rural Settlement undertaken by
English Heritage. Most recently Natural England has produced a
highly detailed digital survey of the remaining ancient
woodland to be used as a guide in land use planning.
The Methdology:
To test the association of surnames with the woodlands, we
will use
The Natural England GIS Digital Boundary set as a surrogate
for the ancient woodlands. 76% of the 41,029 woods in the data
base are named and can provide important clues to place and
surname etymology. The search facility of The Surname Atlas will
be used to isolate surname elements from the 1881 census.
Similarly place names with the same elements can queried from
the Gazetteer of British
Place Names. The Place name distributions can then be
compared with the distribution of surnames and the woodlands.
Several specific surnames will be mapped to illustrate
distributions with single, plural and multiple origins.
Finally a case study will examine in more detail surnames
derived from "Box" woods.
(Unless otherwise noted surname distributions will be mapped
"per 100,000 population" to eliminate bias caused by urban
agglomeration or by sparsely inhabited areas. In doing so the maps
will hopefully focus attention on the underlying impact of the
woodlands. )
Surnames derived from "ley".
The most common "woodland" names are those bearing the "ley"
suffix or it's variants.{ ley(1,828), Leigh(133),
Lee(56), and Lea(47) } Remarkably 775 surnames with a
frequency greater than 100 carry the "ley" suffix. "Ley"
surnames accounted for 773,386 individuals and 2.96 % of the
population in 1881. The suffix appears in combination with place
names, topographic features, personal names, crop types, and
species of animal and trees.
Multiple origins are
likely including the Manchester Region, West Yorkshire, the
Midlands and Gloucestershire. Bradley place names appear to be
spatially associated with the surname concentrations. Bradley
woods are also closely associated with Bradley places.
The distribution of the Oakley surname is closely aligned
with the woodlands, particularly the flanks of the Pennines and
the margins of the Chilterns. A number of Oakley Places and
Oakley woods are found in close proximity to the surname
clusters
Shaw
Surnames:
The Henshaw surname is relatively rare. It is fond on the
margins of the Pennines in close proximity to both Henshaw places
and Henshaw Woods.
Wood Surnames:
The Sherwood surname is widely distributed throughout the
ancient woodlands. There are several places named Sherwood
however they don't appear to be closely related to the surname
distribution.
Phil
Sherwood has suggested that the name is related to "Shirewoods"
This certainly seems to be the case in numerous locations in the
north west where Shirewoods exist.
Woodbury is an extremely rare Surname. Located in Devon, it
likely has a single origin Derived from the place name Woodbury.
Case History:
The "Box" Surnames
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Early English
inlaid boxwood tea caddy with banding c1790
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Today the Boxwood is widely distributed in the southern half
of the United Kingdom. Such has not always been the case.
Evidence suggests it may have been native to parts of southern
Britain in pre glacial times but it was certainly
reintroduced by the Romans. Valued for its tight grain,
"Box" was, and continues to be used by wood workers for small
vessels and for inlay. It was also utilized as hedging and
topiary by the Romans. Following the collapse of Roman Britain,
boxwood naturalized into selected favorable niches.
It's preference was for locations with steep south facing
slopes and mildly acidic well drained soil. Today native Boxwood
is often found in association with stands of Beech and Yew which
also favour slopes and well drained calcareous or sandy soil.
A number of surnames contain the prefix "Box", with a total
frequency of 5694 individuals found in the 1881 census. Of
these, Box(2424), and Boxall(2378), are by far the most common,
comprising 84% of the individuals.
The meaning of the second element in Boxall is
uncertain. Several possibilities can be advanced. For example it
could be derived from Box Hill, Box Hall, or Boxholt. George
Redmonds identifies a number of ways surnames can be transformed
over time. Aspiration can result in the dropping of the h
sound. Thus Box Hill could become Box ill, or Box Hall might be
expressed as Box all. In the case of Boxholt(e), either the
h, might be dropped, or the "t" truncated, resulting
in Boxol and eventually Boxall. Dialect would clearly play a
role in this process.
The Box/Boxall surname distribution:
With respect to the
Box surname Rainey identifies several possible locations,
Box in Gloucestershire, Box in Wiltshire, Box Hall in Herts or a
residence "near a Box tree as in Thomas Atteboxe 1263". Both Box
Wiltshire and Box Gloucestershire appear to be at the core of
the Box distributions.
The Boxall Homeland:
In
the 1881 census the Boxall surname
appeared to be
concentrated in the North West Sussex, Hampshire and South West
Surry. This pattern is even more pronounced when locations
associated with the16th and 17th century surname distributions
are mapped.
Reaney points to a
Bugsell farm in Salehurst (Sx), or a "lost Boxholt(e)" near
Kirdford Sussex as a possible point of origin for the Boxall
surname. Additional place name evidence strongly supports the
vicinity of Kirdford. On the outskirts of Kirdford one finds:
Six miles north west of
Kirdford in the parish of Lurgshall we find:
Within the Clay Weald the term "copse" is used to describe
the
vast majority of woodlands.
The fact that "coppice" is of Old French origin, suggests much
of the Weald may have been transformed for exploitation
following the Norman conquest, particularly during the period of
population expansion.
The occurrence of a
Boxalland Copse in each area points to the possibility that the
Boxalls were involved in coppicing wood. The family of William
Boxall (Boxalland Farm Kirdford), owned woods of oak and beech
in 1656 (Kirdford Inventories 1611- 1776). The apparent "move
west" by the Boxalls to Lurgshall may have been precipitated by
the exhaustion of the woodlands in the Kirdford area. In is
likely Kirdford supplied wood for the nearby Petworth glass
industry. (see side note)
The Lost Boxholt(e):
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Woodlands were an important element in the
economy of the eleventh century. Acorns and
beech-mast provided food for
swine |
Early Saxon settlements were largely restricted to
river valleys and areas with adequate soil fertility. In
Northwest Sussex, Saxon settlements were confined to areas
underlain by
Upper and Lower Greensand and Galt strata. In
contrast the
soil on which Kirdford is located is of poor quality
(clay), and the region was still sparsely inhabited in the late
Saxon early Norman period.
Small independent satellite villages and farms tied to the
manors located in the Greensand belt characterized settlements
in the Clay Weald. Boxholt(e) may have been one such settlement.
The Saxon term holt(e) is interpreted as a managed wood. The
Saxon Manors of the Greensands are known to have had
appurtenance in the Weald used
for pannage and as a source of wood.
The Domesday survey is silent concerning
settlement on the Clay Weald. Kirdford, and
neighboring forest villages are noticeably absent. However 200
years later
Kirdford, and Boxholte, are places recorded
in the Assizes of 1279 (Sussex Place Names). In 1291, Rectories
in
Kirdford, Linchmere, Lurgshall, and Stedham were
recorded in the Pope Nicholas taxation.
The location of Boxholte remains a mystery. Hundreds of
English villages disappeared in the aftermath of the plague in
the 14th century. It would not be surprising if small
settlements or hamlets in the Weald experienced a similar fate.
Alternatively it's resource base may have been exhausted
resulting in the disappearance of the settlement.
Are there clues which might lead to Boxholte's location? We
can only speculate. Was the location of Box Cottage at some
point in the distant past associated with a Boxwood?
Might this be the lost Boxholt(e)? Access to Kirdford likely
would have been reached from Petworth to the south. As noted
above the Petworth glass industry relied on the Weald as a
source of wood. The parish boundaries of Petworth extend well
into the Weald to within a mile of Kirdford. Box Cottage is on
the boundary of the two Parishes.
Environmental conditions favorable for the growth of
Boxwood may provide a clue to its location. As previously
mentioned, Box and Beech woods are often found in association
with each other.
Beech and Yew are found in a belt along the sloping
margins of the Clay and Upper Greensand beds. It is noteworthy
that Beech and Yew woods are also found near the southern
margins of Kirdford parish.
Finally a potential location is found due north of Kirdford.
In the midst of the clay one finds a limestone outcrop near
Plainstow. Given the preference for calcareous soils
this might also merit consideration as a potential site for the
mysterious Boxhot(e).
While it is not possible to come to any definitive conclusion
concerning the location of the "lost Boxholt" the evidence
strongly points to the Kirdford region as the home of the Boxall
surname.
Thanks to the
valued assistance of the following Guild of One Name Studies
members who contributed to this project:
| Ronnie Mench |
| June Willing
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| John Commins
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| Marion Woolgar
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| Andrew Millard |
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