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Ainderby Quernhow in the Domesday Book (1086)

YEAR: 1086 HUNDRED: Land of Count Alan COUNTY: Yorkshire

Ainderby Quernhow appears in the Domesday Book of 1086, entered under the hundred of Land of Count Alan in Yorkshire.

Other Settlements in Land of Count Alan

The Meaning of the Name

The name Ainderby Quernhow is of Scandinavian origin. Its final element derives from the Old Norse word , a farmstead or village. The first element is most likely a personal name or an early descriptive term, now difficult to recover with certainty. Taken together the name probably meant something close to ‘a farmstead’.

Names of this type are a fingerprint of Scandinavian settlement: they cluster across the old Danelaw, where Norse-speaking settlers renamed or founded villages from the late 9th century onward.

Remarkably, the name has changed little since 1086, when the Domesday scribes wrote it as Ainderby Quernhow.

Listed Buildings Near Ainderby Quernhow

Historic England records 7 listed buildings within about a mile of Ainderby Quernhow. Listing protects structures of special architectural or historic interest, graded I (exceptional), II* (particularly important) and II.

Grade II

Scheduled Monuments Near Ainderby Quernhow

Scheduled monuments are nationally important archaeological sites given legal protection. 1 lies within roughly a mile of Ainderby Quernhow:

Ainderby Quernhow Today

Today Ainderby Quernhow lies within the administrative area of North Yorkshire, and the settlement recorded a population of 57 at the 2021 census. Nine and a half centuries separate that figure from the small rural community the Domesday survey recorded here in 1086.

Read more about modern Ainderby Quernhow on Wikipedia .

Nearby Domesday Settlements

Other places recorded in the 1086 survey within a few miles:

Heritage Around Ainderby [Quernhow]

Photographs of churches, listed buildings and monuments in the vicinity, contributed by volunteers to the Geograph project and reused here under a Creative Commons licence.

Medieval village site, Howgrave
Medieval village site, Howgrave (2010)
© Gordon Hatton · Geograph · CC BY-SA 2.0
That Was A Chapel?
That Was A Chapel? (2008)
© Steve Reeves · Geograph · CC BY-SA 2.0
Looking Towards Pickhill From Sandfield Lane
Looking Towards Pickhill From Sandfield Lane (2007)
© Steve Reeves · Geograph · CC BY-SA 2.0

Images © their respective photographers, licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 and reused here with attribution. Photographs depict listed buildings, churches and monuments near this settlement and may show neighbouring villages.

Location

54.2189°N, -1.4708°W · Land of Count Alan hundred, Yorkshire

View larger map on OpenStreetMap →

Data derived from the Open Domesday project (opendomesday.org), based on the Domesday Book dataset compiled by Professor J.J.N. Palmer and team. The Domesday Book (1086) is in the public domain.

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