1 gen 1678 anni - kid
Descrizione:
A faggot or bundle of twigs, gorse etc, bound with a withy and suitable for kindling. 1395 <i> Item servientibus portant kyds apud Dunsley, </i>Whitby (SS72/608); 1423 <i> Et de vij l. receptis pro octo m. de kyddes </i>, York (SS45/81); 1472 <i> Et solverunt pro Kyddes et bakyng, xd </i>, York (SS129/69); 1548 <i> I will that my suster Anne have halfe a thousand kiddes yerlie for her fier </i>, Thorganby (SS106/266); 1678 <i> to sett fyre on about threescore kidds of whinns </i>, Huby (SS40/229). Kids were also used by builders when mending jetties and river defences: 1543 <i> the underwode … standeth by byrche alder and sallow felled and to be felled this yere, and made in kyddes towarde the mending of the bankes and stathes of the water of Owse </i>, Selby (YRS13/362). An earlier translated passage refers to the practice in 1464-5 in Hull (YRS141/98) so it may be the specific element in a number of minor place-names. In 1595, for example, ‘one close called <i> Kidcarre </i>’ was linked to fields called Hollings and Broom Close, Stockeld (YRS76/153). A much earlier possibility is <i> Kyderanes </i> in an undated deed for Hovingham (YRS83/132).
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