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

Redmarley dAbitot

  • The suggested derivation of this name in The place-names of Gloucestershire (Smith, A.H. - Cambridge: University Press - q.v.), is from the Old English words hrëod - mere - lëah; meaning 'clearing by the reed-mere'. However, to see Redmarley nestling amongst rolling fields and hedgerows today, suggests a rather more prosaic meaning - the soil is noticeably red, and a heavy clay - hence "Red Marle" would aptly describe it! One of those strange coincidences, perhaps? Not so for the French sounding suffix, of which the aforementioned book suggests "The feudal addition is derived from the family of Urse d'Abitot of whom already in DB (Domesday Book), two hides were held". It is further suggested that Abitot may derive from Abbetot in Normandy, a compound of the Northern French tot (=toft) and the personal name Api or the common word æble, 'apple'.

 

Gloucestershire

  • Smith, A. H. (Albert Hugh; 1903-1967), The place-names of Gloucestershire. One of the English Place-Name Society Series; v.38-41. Cambridge: University Press (1964-1965). In 4 Volumes:
    1. The river- and road-names. The east Cotswolds
    2. The north and west Cotswolds
    3. The lower Severn Valley. The Forest of Dean
    4. Introduction, bibliography, analyses, index, maps.
  • St. Clair Baddeley, Welbore (1856-1945), Place-names of Gloucestershire : a handbook. Gloucestershire : J. Bellows, 1913.