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A brief history
of Keswick
Keswick's history
dates back to Neolithic times as confirmed by finds of stone implements
and weapons in the area. The 4000 year old stone circle at Castlerigg
is evidence of settlements in the area and was probably used as
a meeting place and for tracking the seasons.
Since
1276 there has been a market in the town of Keswick (from 'Cese-wic'
- the cheese town), and cheese fairs were held regularly until the
early 1900's.
Medieval Keswick
had been planned as a ribbon development along either side of the
market place. By the 19th century these plots had been filled in
as Yards supporting small workshops and cottage industries based
on wool and leather.
Industrially,
Keswick had been at the centre of the mining activities that took
place in the Lake District during and after the reign of Queen Elizabeth
1. The discovery of wad (graphite) in a mine in Borrowdale, the
availability of water for motive power, and wood from trees, resulted
in the development of pencil production in the town. This industry
is still there today, as the Cumberland Rexel Pencil Factory.
The Moot Hall,
the most prominent of Keswick's buildings probably dates back to
1571 when it was used as a Court House. Since then it has been used
as a market, prison and Town Hall.
Writers and
poets have been attracted to Keswick's relative isolation and natural
beauty since the late 18th Century. William & Dorothy Wordsworth
stayed in the town in 1794, Samuel Taylor Coleridge rented part
of Greta Hall from 1800-1803, and his brother-in-law, Robert Southey,
the poet laureat, stayed in Greta Hall for forty years. It was while
living there that he wrote the famous children's story, the 'Three
Bears'
Following the
opening of the railway in 1865, Keswick increasingly became a fashionable
centre for visitors in search of lake and mountain scenery. The
population of the town is now 5,000, only a little more than the
4,500 inhabitants of 1901. The slow, but steady, increase in visitor
numbers over the years has caused evolution within the town rather
than the drastic changes seen in many other tourist resorts. Thus
the friendly, small town feeling is still present.
Lakeland
Placenames
There are many words we find in Lakeland place names which have
there origins in old Viking and Roman language. The following are
some of the most common with there meanings.
Aiken
Barf
Barrow
Base
Bield
Birk
Both, Bothel
Brock
Cal, Calva
Cam
Clough
Combe
Dodd
Dub
Eel, ill
Esk
Garth
Gate
Gris
Hause, hawse
Hay
Holme
How(e)
Keld
Knott
Man
Nab
Raise
Rake
Ridding
Rigg
Sail
Sca
Scale
Scarth
Seat
Stack
Stickle
Stile
Thwaite
Wath
With,wyth
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Clad with oak trees
Hill, Ridge
Hill, Ridge
Cowshed
Animals lair
Birch tree
Dwelling, hut
Badger
Calf
Crest, ridge
Ravine
High valley
Round bare hill
Deep pool in a river
Steep or evil
Water
Enclosure
Track, path
Pig
Pass, col
High
Island
Small hill
Spring, well
Rocky hill
Large summit cairn
Nose, steep spur
Cairn, stone heap
Rough sloping path
Bracken
Ridge
Hollow
Steep crag
Hut
Gap, pass
Hill pasture
Rock pillar
Sharp peak
Steep path, ridge
Clearing
Ford
Wood |
Enjoy a visit to Keswick in our Bed and Breakfast Guest House and during your stay find out more about the remarkble history of the area. Glendale Guest House offers comfortable B&B accommodation throughout the year and we can help you with walks to the Stone Circle and other historic sites. |