Out & About …

… on the North York Moors, or wherever I happen to be.

Roseberry from Pinchinthorp

Another view of Roseberry Topping, this time from Pinchinthorp on the Great Ayton to Guisborough Road.Ā Pinchinthorp is an ancient township, the name deriving fromĀ Pincium, or Pinchun, a Norman family who held land here in the 12th century. To describeĀ Pinchinthorp today as a hamlet is a bit of an overstatement.


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2 responses to “Roseberry from Pinchinthorp”

  1. Russ O'Callaghan avatar
    Russ O’Callaghan

    Mic, is ā€œToppingā€ a local or regional name around here for little, isolated hills or tors ? Iā€™m asking because thereā€™s another one, isnā€™t there, a bit further south called Blakey Topping. Itā€™s far smaller than Roseberry and itā€™s the only other one that I know of.

    1. Mick Garratt avatar

      Hi Russ, it comes from Old Norse toppinn meaning a hill top. Roseberry is also Norse probably Othenesberg or Odin’s Hill.

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