17/05/2010
Jacqueline Simpson
Pub Names Specialist
Dr Jacqueline Simpson was born in 1930 and studied English Literature and Medieval Icelandic at Bedford College, University of London. She has been an active member of the Folklore Society since the 1960s, having served at various times as Editor, Secretary and President. She also belongs to the Viking Society for Northern Research.She is particularly interested in local legends, both English and Scandinavian. Her books include British Dragons (1980), Scandinavian Folktales (1988), A Dictionary of English Folklore (2000, with Steve Roud), The Lore of the Land (2005, with Jennifer Westwood) and The Folklore of the Discworld (2008, with Terry Pratchett). She is a member of the Ghosts and Scholars Society and the Dracula Society. She lives in Sussex.
This will be an regular feature on what the origins of some of the Pub Names across Britain are.
To pre-order Green Men and White Swans - here book on the history and folklore of British pub names click here
Posts from this blogger
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05/07/2010 Labour in Vain
This curious name, known in London from the seventeenth to the nineteenth century,...
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24/06/2010 Jack-in-the-Green
A Jack-in-the-Green is a man covered from head to foot in a mass of leaves fixed t...
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14/06/2010 Hooden Horse, Hoodener...
There used to be a pub at Wickambreaux, near Canterbury, which had the unusual nam...
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09/06/2010 Giant Inn (Cerne Abbas...
It is good to see pubs renaming themselves as a tribute to a fine local landmark....
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01/06/2010 Dick Turpin
Many pubs are named after this famous highwayman, notably one in York, where he wa...
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24/05/2010 The Cuckoo
The name and sign of the Cuckoo Bush pub at Gotham (Nottinghamshire) celebrate the...
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18/05/2010 The Black Dog
Some Black Dog pubs are called after some real flesh-and-blood doggie, others afte...
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