As promised the Emails and Prof Steve Hardings reply
To: "dave ********" <davew3@*********>
Thanks Dave
You can quote me with identification and also Paul if he adds anything.
Intriguigingly Birket sounds like a modern Norwegian name "the birch (tree)" but that is just coincidence.
All best wishes
Steve Harding
________________________________________
From: dave ******** [davew3@*********]
Sent: 03 March 2011 10:46
To: Stephen Harding
Subject: RE: Naming of Wirral rivers
Thank you for replying to my questions, can I have your permission to copy the email body of your reply without any identification onto the Wikiwirral, Fender thread.
Thank you for again your help
Dave ********
--- On Wed, 2/3/11, Stephen Harding <Steve.Harding@***********> wrote:
> From: Stephen Harding <Steve.Harding@********>
> Subject: RE: Naming of Wirral rivers
> To: "dave ********" <davew3@********>
> Date: Wednesday, 2 March, 2011, 21:53
> Dear Dave
> Thanks for your enquiry. They are not Viking names.
> Also, whereas river names can be very old going back before
> even the Celts we don't think this is the case for the
> Fender and Birket, the names seem to be more recent
> The authorative word is J. M. Dodgson and attached is what
> he writes in "The Place Names of Cheshire" Part I -
> which includes rivers and streams.
> The Birket was formally the Birkin which is considered to
> have come from Birkenhead, although Dodgson thinks the
> stream was called the Fender - like the present one.
> The present Fender seems to derive from the name referring
> to a drainage system or bank protecting low lying land from
> flooding - and we know large areas of N. Wirral were liable
> to flooding before the sea defences were built. An
> earlier name is 1522 The water of Ayne, whose meaning seems
> unknown, maybe this is much older.
> I've copied this to Dr.Paul Cavill of the English Place
> Name Society to see if he can add anything.
> Hope this helps a little anyway!
> Steve Harding
>
> ________________________________________
> From: dave ******** [davew3@********]
> Sent: 24 February 2011 08:29
> To: steve.harding@********
> Subject: Naming of Wirral rivers
>
> Dear Professor Harding.
>
> As a member of https://www.wikiwirral.co.uk,I'am
> wondering if you could help in answering a question posed on
> a history forum.
>
>
https://www.wikiwirral.co.uk/forums/ubbthreads.php/forums/80/1/Wirral_History.html>
>
> Subject River Fender.
>
> We are trying to find out if/when the river Fender and the
> Birket were named and if they were named in Celtic or Viking
> times or even before that and I am wondering if you would
> have any information on the subject, knowing that your
> interest is the Viking era.
>
>
> my name on the forum is davew3
>
> regards Dave ********
> Wirral
>
>
>
Apart from email addresses removed and the usual threats at the bottom if the email gets in the wrong hands and a bit of formatting because of line breaks,it's as is.
It now means going back through the 17 pages to check out and a look see if we can get the book on Ebay.
The attachment has a pdf extension so needs to be modded to a jpg will do that later and post it.