Wivelshire

Coordinates: 50°27′25″N 4°26′38″W / 50.457°N 4.444°W / 50.457; -4.444
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Sketchmap of the Looe rivers

East Wivelshire and West Wivelshire (usually known merely as East and West) are two of the ancient Hundreds of Cornwall.

Norden's map of East Hundred.

East and West (Wivelshire) must have originally had a Cornish name but it is not recorded. The name of nearby Lostwithiel has the second element gwydhyow[1] meaning 'trees'; wivel may also be from the Anglo-Saxon personal name Wifel.[2] There are also Anglican deaneries by the same names, but the modern boundaries do not correspond exactly. The area must have formed one hundred originally but had already been divided into two before the Norman Conquest: they are grouped in Domesday under the head manors of Rillaton (East) and Fawton (West). The Cornish names are Ryslegh (East) and Fawy (West).[3][4] However the suggestion that 'the area must have formed one hundred originally' is disputed by the noted Cornish historian, the Rev. W. M. M. Picken, who believes the names to be derived from the Saxon twi-feald-scir, meaning 'two-fold shire.' The 'invariable prefixing of the words East or West ... explains what has happened to the initial letter t' (A Medieval Cornish Miscellany, by W. M. M. Picken, edited by O. J. Padel, Chichester, 2000.)

Civil parishes

East Wivelshire

East Wivelshire
St Thomas Apostle-by-Launceston, Tremaine, Tresmeer, Trewen

West Wivelshire

West Wivelshire

References

  1. ^ Gerlyvrik Kernewek Sowsnek
  2. ^ Thomas, Charles (1964) "Settlement History in Early Cornwall: I; the antiquity of the hundreds" in: Cornish Archaeology; 3. St Ives: Cornwall Archaeological Society, pp. 70-79)
  3. ^ kw:Res Legh
  4. ^ kw:Fawy

50°27′25″N 4°26′38″W / 50.457°N 4.444°W / 50.457; -4.444