Eccup
This article needs additional citations for verification. (April 2013) |
| Eccup | |
|---|---|
| File:Old Village Hall Eccup 2016.jpg Old Village Hall, Eccup | |
| Lua error in Module:Location_map at line 411: Malformed coordinates value. | |
| OS grid reference | SE2842 |
| Civil parish | |
| Metropolitan borough | |
| Metropolitan county | |
| Region | |
| Country | England |
| Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
| Post town | LEEDS |
| Postcode district | LS16 |
| Dialling code | 0113 |
| Police | West Yorkshire |
| Fire | West Yorkshire |
| Ambulance | Yorkshire |
| UK Parliament | |
Eccup is a village in the parish of Alwoodley and north of the City of Leeds, West Yorkshire, England. It is just north of Alwoodley and east of Bramhope and Golden Acre Park. Eccup is at the north-west edge of Eccup Reservoir. On 1 April 1926 Eccup became a civil parish, being formed from part of Adel cum Eccup, on 1 April 1928 the parish was abolished and merged with Leeds.[1]
Etymology
[edit | edit source]The place-name Eccup is first attested in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Echope. It is thought to derive from an Old English personal name Ecca + hōp 'enclosed land amid unpromising land; a small, enclosed valley'. It would therefore mean something like 'Ecca's patch of good land'.[2] The name is referred to as Ecop in the Coucher Book of Kirkstall Abbey.[3] From the sixteenth century the area up to the River Wharfe was known as Adel cum Eccup.[4] Adel is about 2 miles south-west of Eccup.
Burden Head Farm, just to the north of the village, is also first attested in the Domesday book, as Burgedurun and Burgheduru’. It is thought to come from the Old English words burg ('fortified place') and dūn; thus it once meant 'hill of the fortification'.[5]
Geography
[edit | edit source]Kelly's Directory of the West Riding of Yorkshire (1881) refers to a Methodist (Wesleyan) chapel in Eccup.[6]
Use in Emmerdale
[edit | edit source]Eccup and The New Inn public house at the north of the village are location settings for the soap Emmerdale.[7] Brookland Farm, a working farm to the south of the pub, is used for external shots of Butlers Farm, and Creskeld Hall, north-west in Arthington, for Home Farm. However, most of the soap is filmed in a specially built village in the neighbouring parish of Harewood to the north-east.[citation needed]
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New Inn
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Burden Head Farm
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Sycamore Cottage
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Thornbush Cottage
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Emmerdale Village set
References
[edit | edit source]- ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
- ^ Victor Watts, The Cambridge Dictionary of English Place-Names, Based on the Collections of the English Place-Name Society (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004), s.v. ECCUP.
- ^ Thoresby Society (1904), Coucher Book of Kirkstall Abbey, Volume VIII, Part III, p. 246
- ^ www.leeds.gov.uk Archived 19 September 2016 at the Wayback Machine Adel NDS Revised Draft for Consultation April 2014.
- ^ Harry Parkin, Your City's Place-Names: Leeds, English Place-Name Society City-Names Series, 3 (Nottingham: English Place-Name Society, 2017), p. 29.
- ^ Kelly's Directory of the West Riding of Yorkshire (1881), Part 1, page 48, accessed 25 November 2017
- ^ Burden Head Farm, watercolour painting, Leodis: A Photographic Archive of Leeds, accessed 18 March 2024
External links
[edit | edit source]Error creating thumbnail: File missing Media related to Lua error in Module:Commons_link at line 62: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). at Wikimedia Commons
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