button to main menu  Camden's Britannia, edn 1789

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Page 183:-
  Cockermuth.
  Cockermouth
"Cokermuth, a market town, standing on the west side of Darwent, four or five miles from the se shore and 20 from Carluel [h]." It is a large borough town with broad streets, washed by the Derwent, and divided by the Cocker, at whose mouth it stands; the inhabitants amount to 3 or 4000; the manufactory is shalloons, worsted stockings and hats. The castle, built by Waltheof first lord of Allendale, and son of Gospatrick earl of Northumberland t. Conq. or by William de Meschines lord of the honor of Cockermouth, stands on an artificial hill, is square, and has several towers. On each side the second gate two spacious dungeons. It was burnt in the civil war [i]. The town gives title of viscount to the earl of Egremont, to whom the castle came by the Percies as to them from the Lucies and Pipards [k].
  Pap castle.
  roman fort, Papcastle
Pap castle, perhaps contracted from Pipard its owner, is said to have been demolished, and the materials employed to build Cockermouth castle [l]. It is in Bridekirk parish, which is a large one.
Mr. Routh thus describes the ruins discovered at Pap castle, Jan. 16, 174½ (sic) [m].
"I made particular enquiry of the man in whose grounds they were discovered and of some of the neighbours present at the discovery. The close in which they lay is a little to the south of the fort, on the declivity of the hill to the river, and bounded on the west by a narrow lane, probably the Via militaris continued, and is usually shewn to strangers as the most remarkable here for finding Roman coins.
"These are the largest ruins ever known to be discovered in these parts: for they met with three walls besides the pavement; the first lay east and west and was covered with earth near a foot high: parallel to it at seven yards they found a second, and between these two about two yards deep (the height of the walls, which were six yards broad and strongly cemented), they came to a pavement curiously laid with large flags three-quarters of a yard square and two or three inches thick, as I measured them: but imagining there must be money under it, they covered it up till night, and then tore it all up. It was composed of flags of different thickness: under the thinner was a coarse strong cement which caused them to be broken in taking up, but the thicker are pretty entire. Part of the wall stood on the floor, and the edge was secured by a fine red cement two inches thick, supposed to be intended to keep the floor dry. They imagined themselves at the corner of the building, the third wall standing at right angles with the first, and the second parallel to the stoney lane, on which was an old hedge. On the floor they found a stone trough or rather base of a pillar about a foot high, and the hollowed part square and two inches deep.
"They likewise found a small earthen patera, which I procured, of the fine red clay, beautifully smooth, with letter impressed on the bottom, but so defaced as not to be intelligible. Some years ago, the man's father who found these ruins dug up a conduit. The owner had no coins nor knew of any. One of his neighbours shewed me a large brass one defaced."
Mr. Routh in another letter to Mr. Gale [n] April 13, 1743, describes a fibula, a coin of Trajan, ... IANO AVG. ... P. M. Rev. the emperor seated on a pile of arms, a trophy before him, S.P.Q.R. OPTI ... S. C. and two oaken pieces of the adjoining timber of a house which appeared to have been burnt, in the garden of Jerom Tully, esq; of Carlisle. The earth as far as they dug was artificial, and antiquities are only found at a considerable depth.
Dr. Stukeley [o] says the Roman castrum lies on the top of the hill above the village, and he traced its whole circumference, a bit of the Roman wall by the river side going to Wigton, and there the ditch is plainly visible, though half filled up with the rubbish of the wall. A subterraneous vault, floored with large slabs of freestone, was found in the pasture of the south-east angle. The name of Boroughs includes both closes where it stood, and they find stones and slates with iron pins in them, coins, &c. on the whole spot below it towards the water side. It was a beautiful and well-chosen plan, on the south-west side of a hill, a noble river running under, and pretty good country about it. Coins of Claudius, Adrian, and a silver Geta, PONT. rev. PRINCEPS IVVENTVTIS. He supposes its antient name DERVENTIO derived from the Derwent.
  Eglesfield.
  Eaglesfield
Eglesfield gave name to the antient family, lords of the manor, of whom was Robert Eglesfield, rector of Brough c. Westmorland, and founder of Queen's college, Oxford [p].
  Bridekirk.
  Bridekirk, font
The font at Bridekirk was copied for the late bishop Lyttelton, and engraved in Archaeol. II. p.131. It exhibits in rude relief the expulsion of Adam and Eve out of Paradise, and the baptism of Christ, over which may perhaps be the serpent with the forbidden fruit. The other two sides are charged with grotesques and foliage, and on the south is the inscription in Runic characters on a scroll. Bishop Nicolson in a long and learned letter to sir William Dugdale 1685, reads it Er Ekard men egroten & to dis men red wer Taner men brogten; which he explains, Here Ekard was converted, and to this man's example were the Danes brought. He considers the characters a mixture of Runic and Saxon, and the language made up of Danish and Saxon. Bishop Lyttelton imagines the font older than the event here commemorated, and the inscription added at the time it happened, though he justly doubted its being found at Pap castle, as it could have no connection with that station. Ekard might give the font after his conversion. Wormius gave a very different explanation in a letter to Spelman 1634. Haraldus cumulum fecit & lapides erexit in memoriam matris amp; Mabroki; which gives the letters from Camden's copy so different from bishop Nicolson that one would doubt if they had ever been truly copied. Camden's letters are certainly incorrect to a degree, and Wormius had no other copy; whereas bishop Nicolson professes to have exactly written them out from the stone. Dr, Hickes in a letter to bishop Nicolson says, the letters seem to be Dano-Saxonic, consequently neither good Danish nor good Saxon. On comparing the three copies of Camden, Wormius, and Nicolson, it appears that Camden gives 36, Nicolson 34 (omitting the 30th and 31st, which in the Archaeologia copy by Mr. Ainsley
[h] Lel. VII. 71.
[i] Pennant, 41. Grose.
[k] Grose. Buck. Stukeley, II. 48. Burn, II. 65.
[l] Pennant.
[m] Letter to Mr. Gale. Reliq. Gal. p.445.
[n] Ib. p.446.
[o] It. II. 51.
[p] Burn, II. 60.
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gazetteer links
button -- Cockermouth Castle
button -- "Cokermuth" -- Cockermouth
button -- "Eglesfield" -- Eaglesfield
button -- "Pap Castle" -- Pap Castle
button -- "Derventio" -- (roman fort, Papcastle)
button -- St Bridget's Church
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