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Names, Geographical information for Crich and places above it in the hierarchy

Crich

  • Locals pronounce the name as "CRY-ch".
     
  • The name Crich is from the Celtic Crug for "a mound or hill". In 1009 the name is rendered as Cryc. In the 1086 Domesday Book, the village is given as Crice.
    [A. D. MILLS, "A Dictionary of English Place-Names," Oxford University Press, 1991]

Derbyshire

The formal name of the county is "Derbyshire", but "Derby" is the accepted alternative. Be careful not to confuse the county with the city of "Derby". Locals often pronounce both as "Darby".

  • CAMERON, Kenneth, The place-names of Derbyshire. One of the English Place-Name Society Series; Volume XXIX. Published by Cambridge: University Press (1951-2). In 3 Volumes:
    1. Part 1: Introduction, river-names, High Peak Hundred, Maps.
    2. Part 2: Scarsdale, Wirksworth, Morleyston & Litchurch Hundreds.
    3. Part 3: Appletree, Repton & Gresley Hundreds; Analyses and Indexes.

     
  • John PALMER has created an online DERBYSHIRE PLACENAMES Index, listing 7,000 places within the county, including the parish and Hundred each lies in, and with a simple (text) map to locate the parish.

England

UK and Ireland