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Image Owner: munki @ Shootability.co.uk
This area was known as Cnolleshalgh (Knowlshaw) a name that could be tracable back to ancient times as possibly a derivitive of the Old English personal name Cenulfes (Cenewulf, Cynewulf) with the suffix either sceaga (shaw) literally 'The Wood' or perhaps haga (halh, halgh) an enclosure, wattled or hedged enclosure, or an enclosure or space with a triangular shape or corner. Either meaning becomes appropriate if the area enclosed by the Crooked Edge Brook and River Douglas known as Shaw's Park is both triangluar and wooded. Or perhaps the larger area defined in an a grant of land from the 13th Century, more on this later.
It is also possible that the 'le' in Knolle could be a shortened from the old Saxon lea, (laeh, ley) that would indicate a meadow or open space or in Latin lith, open country, more specifically woodland that has been cleared, opposed to the alternate common place name suffix 'feld' meaning land that is naturally clear; that is, not woodland.
A medieval text thought to date from around 1285 AD exists, written in a local dialect of Old English that describes the extent of a fourth of the Knollshaw estate. We don't have a copy of the original text and the least altered interpretation we can find is shown below. It should be noted that only certain words in the text are shown in seemingly literal Old English so we cannot be sure the interpretation of the rest of the text is accurate.
Grant of Cecily, daughter of William de Roynton, the widow of Roger de Workedlegh, to Adam son of Robert son of Dorant; one-fourth of Knolleshaw in Rivington.
Sciant omnes Sec I, CeciHa daughter of William de
Roynton, formerly wife of " Roger de Workydelle "
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