Bucklebury
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| − | '''Bucklebury''' was the chief village of [[Buckland]], lying in the shadow of [[Buck Hill]], seat of the [[Master of Buckland]] | + | '''Bucklebury''' was the chief village of [[Buckland]], lying in the shadow of [[Buck Hill]], seat of the [[Master of Buckland]]. It was built about a mile east of the banks of the River [[Brandywine]].<ref>{{FR|Part}}</ref> |
| + | ==Etymology== | ||
| + | The name means Buck-burg, or Buck-town (''buck'' always means male goat or deer). | ||
| + | [[J.R.R. Tolkien|Tolkien]] notes that it's "Buck''le''bury" rather than plain "Buckbury" because the word is either an alteration of earlier ''Bucken-bury'' (Bucken being archaic plural) or a reduction of '''''Buckl'''and''.<ref name="nomen">{{HM|N}}, p. 767</ref> | ||
| + | {{references}} | ||
[[Category:Buckland]] | [[Category:Buckland]] | ||
| − | [[Category:Cities, | + | [[Category:Cities, towns and villages]] |
[[de:Bockenburg]] | [[de:Bockenburg]] | ||
[[fi:Bukinpuri]] | [[fi:Bukinpuri]] | ||
Latest revision as of 18:22, 13 June 2012
Bucklebury was the chief village of Buckland, lying in the shadow of Buck Hill, seat of the Master of Buckland. It was built about a mile east of the banks of the River Brandywine.[1]
[edit] Etymology
The name means Buck-burg, or Buck-town (buck always means male goat or deer).
Tolkien notes that it's "Bucklebury" rather than plain "Buckbury" because the word is either an alteration of earlier Bucken-bury (Bucken being archaic plural) or a reduction of Buckland.[2]
