Harborne

The origins of Harborne, Birmingham are buried deep in history. An entry in the Domesday Book of 1086 provides the earliest mention of a settlement:
Horeborne. There is land for one plough. Robert holds it. Smethwick. There is land for two ploughs and Tipton five ploughs. William holds it.
In these lands or hamlets, there are in the demesne seven ploughs and sixty villeins, and twenty-two borderers with twenty-five ploughs.
Amongst them all there are fifty-two acres 210,000 m² of meadow and a mill.
The spelling of Harborne has appeared with several variations through the centuries, and the derivation of the place name has often been disputed. One of the more probable suggestions is 'boundary brook', although 'high brow' and 'dirty brook' are also possibilities Harborne's most notable resident was the poet Auden - the present day swimming baths stand on the site of his former house.

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
g n balasubramaniam
mario lpez
heinrich von brentano
inari, finland
rifat mohammed rifat
lizards in canada
robert peel (christian science)
list of rivers by continent
lincoln continental
reliance infocomm
9 mm luger
7.65 mm luger
slaughter of the soul
silumin
hayes, bromley
cnp
pokgear
vanilla slice
duality (mathematics)
winston chang
terminal spirit disease
brock
innate releasing mechanism
lincoln continental mark v
swedish rescue services agency
mikael kerfeldt
joe calzaghe
propedeutic value of esperanto
no quarter pounder
cheryl bentov
you're so vain
aleksandr yegorov
short horned lizard
kinesin
new tattoo
dynein
alvin lee
roger hedgecock
spain national football team
slippery nipple
zogam
tom keene
barry wilson
flat liner cocktail