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2 comments:

  1. Hello Katherine,

    We are really enjoying your course at Glendon LLIR. It is exceptionally interesting and very informative....along with lots of fun! I had a question.... Some of my ancestors lived at a place called Stonehanger, at Abbotts Ann Down in Hampshire, England. They were in the area for over 150 years, so it is very interesting to us. I looked on the Hampshire Gazetteer and the name Stonehanger was a farm in the 1600's. I believe that the word hanger means a steep slope or hill. In the case of our Stonehanger, there isn't a hill close to the property, but Danebury iron Age Hill Fort is about 2 miles away, and Bury Hill Fort even closer. id there another source or meaning for the word hanger/anger? Maybe it has nothing to do with a steep slope in this case. Thanks! Don and Judy Fleming

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    Replies
    1. Since place names often derive from physical features, the old sense of hanger = woods on a steep slope is the most likely source. Perhaps the farm was closer to a hill when it first existed but was then relocated a little further away but retained its name.

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