33
/it/
AIzaSyAYiBZKx7MnpbEhh9jyipgxe19OcubqV5w
August 1, 2025
1287103
101519
1

1 gen 1613 anni - howetree

Descrizione:

I find no mention of this rare word in standard works of reference. Salzman could offer no meaning but quoted two examples, one in 1318 when <i>howetrys</i> were used to repair a weir in Nottingham (SZ1/85) and the other in 1377 when <i>uno grosso houuetre</i> was a major timber in a dam in York (SZ1/454). Similarly, in 1399-1400 the expenditure on repairs to the Leeds mill dam included money for <i>howetrees</i> in the timber requirements (Th45/76). Clearly ‘howe trees’ were timbers used in the construction of water defences but their exact function remains a mystery. If one<i> holtre</i> forfeited by a Yeadon tenant in 1403 (SW119) shares the same origin they may have been hollowed or grooved beams but just how they were used is not known. </br> That is not the sum total of the evidence. In 1483 the townsmen of Selby faced the possibility that the Ouse might overflow its banks and repairs were called for. Their request for action includes the following statement: <i>the ground gos away and ... with owt it be amendyd is lyke to mescheffe all the gates of Owsgate & all the howynge that bondys of the watter ... we desyer that my Lord ... wald gyff us tymber that we may mayke a comyne seghe </i>(SS85/29). The exact meaning here may be unclear but ‘the howynge’ seems certain to refer to the river defences and I suspect that ‘seghe’ should be ‘soghe’, that is a sough or drain. This was evidently seen as a solution to the problem. In 1612-16 the timber for a mill in Holmfirth listed <i>soyle trees and hovetwood</i> (DD/RA/f/4a). </br> Two additional references suggest that ‘howing’ was work done by carpenters: 1520 <i>Item pro di. thowsand howeyg nales </i>[howeyng?]<i> 3½d</i>, Ripon (SS81/206); 1613-4 <i>my working toles, half my armesaw ... my thwartsaw, my handsaw ... two howing axes, one hatchet,</i> Hampsthwaite (SS110/34) but note in the inventory of a blacksmith: 1543 <i>Item ij howe yrons</i>, Ripley (SS26/43).

Aggiunto al nastro di tempo:

Data:

1 gen 1613 anni
Adesso
~ 412 years ago