Dunkeswick
Dunkeswick is a hamlet in North Yorkshire, around a kilometre north of Harewood and two kilometres south of Kirkby Overblow. Dunkewsick Moor is noted as the site of the Knight Air Flight 816 crash in 1995.
Dunkewsick | |
---|---|
Dunkeswick. Hamlet just to the west of the A61 Leeds/Harrogate Road | |
OS grid reference | SE3046 |
Shire county | |
Region | |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Etymology
The name of Dunkeswick comes from the Old English words cēse ('cheese') and wīc ('dwelling, specialised farm'), and thus once meant 'farm specialising in cheese production'. The fact that keswick begins with [k-] rather than the [tʃ] sound of cheese, however, reflects the influence of Old Norse pronunciation on the local language. The additional element Dun seems to have been added to distintinguish the settlement from other places called Keswick, such as the nearby East Keswick.[1]:42
gollark: It's not? Is it at least sender-verified or whatever?
gollark: hiii
gollark: Also, I think Opus telnet is encrypted.
gollark: Otherwise known as "Windows remote desktop exposed to the internet".
gollark: What about supporting the Remote PotatOS Installation Protocol (RPIP) instead?
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dunkeswick, North Yorkshire. |
- Harry Parkin, Your City's Place-Names: Leeds, English Place-Name Society City-Names Series, 3 (Nottingham: English Place-Name Society, 2017).
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