River Okement Explained

River Okement
Pushpin Map:Devon#UK
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:England
Subdivision Type2:County
Subdivision Name2:Devon
Source1 Location:Dartmoor
Mouth:River Torridge
Mouth Location:Near Meeth
Mouth Coordinates:50.85°N -7°W

The River Okement is a tributary of the River Torridge in Devon, England. It rises at two places in Dartmoor, as the West Okement and the East Okement. These meet with other minor streams and join together at Okehampton. The river flows generally north, past the villages of Jacobstowe and Monkokehampton, and has its confluence with the River Torridge near Meeth.

Toponymy

According to The Cambridge Dictionary of English Place-Names (2004) the derivation of the name is uncertain,[1] but The Place-Names of Devon (1931) gave possible derivations from the Celtic word aku meaning "swift" for the first syllable, and for the second either Welsh myned meaning "to go" or an Aryan root mim, meaning "noisy". The name was first attested in 1244 as aqua de Okem; it appears as Okemund in 1281; and as Ockment flu by Saxton in 1577.[2]

Transport

The West Okement River is crossed by the Meldon Viaduct, built in 1874 as part of the London and South Western Railway.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Watts, Victor. The Cambridge Dictionary of English Place-Names. 2004. Cambridge University Press. 978-0-521-16855-7. 450.
  2. Book: Gover. J. E. B.. Mawer. A.. Stenton. F. M.. The Place-Names of Devon. 1931. Cambridge University Press. 11.
  3. Web site: Meldon Case Study . . 20 August 2023 .