Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › CamelfordCamelford - Wikipedia

    The English name of Camelford was formed by a Anglicisation of the river's name to Camel + Ford, giving it an identical meaning to its Cornish counterpart. [6] The earliest records of the name are in 1205 and 1256 and it has the meaning "ford over the (river) Camel".

  2. Jul 20, 2018 · This real king's name was never known, so could it have been Arthur? Historical record tells us that the ancient town of Camelford was on an old medieval trading route. It became an important commercial centre when a royal charter was granted in 1259 by Richard, Earl of Cornwall .

  3. In 1887, John Bartholomew's Gazetteer of the British Isles described Camelford like this: Camelford, market town, Lanteglos par., E. Cornwall, on river Camel, 15½ miles W. of Launceston and 275 miles SW. of London; P.O., T.O., 3 Banks.Market-day, Friday.

  4. Rising high on the wild Bodmin Moor, the River Camel gets its name from its snaking course through mid Cornwall. From its source to the north of Camelford, and only three miles from the sea, it flows southwest towards Bodmin in the centre of Cornwall.

  5. The Tradition: Old Cornish legend relates how King Arthur's principal fortress of Camelot now lies buried beneath the small Cornish town of Camelford, a place in the heart of King Arthur Country with an obviously connected name.

  6. Feb 25, 2010 · Over time the name was shortened to Camelford, and the town emerged as a major crossing point for travellers bound for the market town of Wadebridge in the south or Launceston, Cornwall’s former capital, to the east.

  7. People also ask

  8. The place name Camelford, first recorded in the early 13th century, contains the Cornish elements camm ‘crooked’, and alan, a common Celtic name for a river. The English suffix ‘ford’ was probably added later, when the settlement developed around a crossing point on the river.

  1. People also search for