Talk:Maryport

Latest comment: 4 years ago by Devokewater in topic Steve Maguire

Tudor

edit

I vaguely recall having seen reference to an early (?Tudor?) antiquary reporting walls of Roman buildings (with plaster on) to still be standing at Maryport in his day, but cannot immediately track this down

i live in maryport

Hello, my name is Philine. I am from Germany and I have written a German article about Maryport. The address is http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maryport I think you can't read it because its German but you can have a look at it if you want. Well, we should presente an English town in our English lesson and i chose Maryport. I think it's a nice name. Bye.

Maryport was Bede's Alcluith

edit

Bit of a controversial statement but Maryport was the likeliest place for Bede's Alcluith - traditionally thought to be Dumbarton. The archaeological evidence from the 6th century BC until the 1st century AD shows clear evidence of Irish settlement in the Solway-Clyde region as far north as Perth. This was clearly in line with Bede, Nennius etc. claim that the sequence of settlement was first Britons, then Picts and the Scots AND then Romans. There is very good evidence that in fact the Scots settled in the Strathclyde region and this was a Scottish "kingdom" rather than a Brythonic Kingdom.

Dumbarton town is in completely the wrong location - It sits on the River Leven and not the Clyde. and most importantly it is on the North side of the Firth of Clyde - Bede clearly indicates that Alcluith was on the South side of the Bay and the Scots occupied the North. The hill fort on Dumbarton Rock was a post Roman construction built in 5th/6th century AD, with no evidence of any earlier settlement. The Firth of Clyde where Dumbarton Rock is located, was not called the Firth of Clyde until the 17th century at the very earliest - it only starts to appear with a name in the late 16th century when it appears as the Firth of Dunbriton or Dumbreton. The Firth of Clyde was only linked to the Clota estuary of Ptolomey in 1607 on William Hole's map, but like Bishop Leslie's Novantum Promontory, he clearly put this in the wrong location, writing the name directly alongside the Kintyre coastline. There is no link between Dumbarton and the "Cluith" whatsoever. Dumbarton's first appearance on any map was as early as 1360 in the Gough map when it was called Dombre Tayne. It appears on several other maps with a similar name, It does not appear as Dun Britain until 1578 on Bishop John Leslie's map, when he clearly moved the Novantun Promontory from Ptolomey's (2nd century AD) Geographia up to the Kintyre peninsula - a peninsula that Ptolomey had actually called The Epidium Promontory. In other word Bishop Leslie deliberately created a northern Alcluith by doing 2 things - 1. moving the Novantum promontory north and changing the name of Dumbarton to fit. In 1583 Nicolas de Nicolaye, a Frenchman with his own independent sources - produced his sea charts and called the town Dumbreton - the same name as appeared on the 1360 Gouh map, so it is clear that the name was altered by Bishop Leslie in 1578 and he introduced the Dun Briton "fort of Britons" claim by "adjusting" the geography and changing place-names to suit.

In 1250AD Matthew Paris constructed a map of Britain and did not name the river clyde flowing fro the sea and past Glasgow - he called it the "River that became Clydesdale" and gave it a date of 1208. He named another river Clyde (or rather Clud) - fl clud - fluvius clud - river clyde, and located it in Cumbria at the end of Hadrian's wall. The Roman Fort at Maryport formed the furthermost region of the Harian's wall defences and was constructed as early as the 1st century AD - so it meets the criteria of being an ancient fort, and being on the south side of the "Bay" and near the river clud named by Matthew Paris. Maryport was also known as Alauna in the Roman period - a Roman word indicating a harbour and which derives from the river Ellen - but ellen itself derives from the word Aln (Alauna) so may not be the original name, and clud itself probably means a crossing point. so Maryport, formerly Ellenfoot, formerly Alauna, was a harbour near a river where there was a crossing point, and Bede's nominis illus statement was not the river "of that name" but the river "named ill" - a river named Ellen. and petram cluith was actually portum cluith - the Harbour cluith.

There is very, very good evidence for Maryport being Bede's Alcluith. It would certainly be a good exercise and probably a boost to the town to establish such a claim - It's certainly got a far more substantial claim than Dumbarton. Maryport has evidence dating from the 1st century AD - 700 years before Bede even started writing - an analysis of Dumbarton proves it's "evidence" is highly dubious and only dates from the late 16th century - 700 years after Bede stopped writing. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Daviefd (talkcontribs) 09:29, 9 June 2018 (UTC)Reply

Tom Pickard

edit

Whats the connection between Tom Pickard, poet, and Maryport? Devokewater (talk) 22:01, 17 October 2018 (UTC)Reply

Steve Maguire

edit

Have removed Steve Maguire, non-notable. Per WP:CITSTRUCT, no article then no inclusion. Devokewater (talk) 15:59, 25 January 2020 (UTC)Reply