Official Name: | Turkdean |
Country: | England |
Region: | South West England |
Static Image: | All Saints' Church, Turkdean Geograph-2821694-by-David-Purchase.jpg |
Static Image Caption: | All Saints' Church, Turkdean |
Label Position: | bottom |
Coordinates: | 51.8568°N -1.8447°W |
Post Town: | CHELTENHAM |
Postcode Area: | GL |
Postcode District: | GL54 |
Dial Code: | 01451 |
Civil Parish: | Turkdean |
Turkdean is a village and civil parish in Gloucestershire, England, approximately 30km (20miles) to the east of Gloucester. It lies in the Cotswolds, an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
Turkdean was recorded as Turcandene in the 8th century and was listed as Turchedene or Turghedene in the Domesday Book of 1086.[1] [2] It derives from the Old English for "valley (denu) of a river called Turce", with Turce or Twrch being a lost Celtic river name, possibly meaning boar.
The Anglican Church of All Saints was built in the 12th century. It is a grade I listed building.[3]
Turkdean is part of the Sandywell ward of the district of Cotswold, represented by Councillor Robin Hughes, a member of the Conservative Party.[4] [5] Turkdean is part of the constituency of Cotswold, represented at parliament by Conservative MP Geoffrey Clifton-Brown.[6] Prior to Brexit in 2020, it was part of the South West England constituency of the European Parliament.
Turkdean is in the county of Gloucestershire and lies within the Cotswolds, a range of hills designated an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. It is approximately 30km (20miles) to the east of Gloucester. It is approximately 21km (13miles) east of its post town Cheltenham and about 8km (05miles) south-west of Bourton-on-the-Water. The southeastern boundary follows the route of the Roman road the Fosse Way. Nearby villages include Cold Aston, Hazleton, Clapton, Farmington and Hampnett.
In the 1981 film Raiders of the Lost Ark, Harrison Ford's character, archaeologist Indiana Jones, mentions the neolithic barrow at Turkdean, near Hazleton, during a university lecture.[7] There are two Neolithic long barrows at Hazleton, one of which was excavated over three summer seasons between 1980 and 1982.[8]
The Channel 4 archaeological television series Time Team made two visits, in 1997 (Time Team Live 1997, repackaged as series 5 episode 4) and 1998 (series 6 episode 9), to excavate a Roman villa site about 1 mile to the north of the village.[9] [10] [11] [12] [13]
In 2012, Turkdean Roman Villa was listed as a Scheduled Monument by Historic England.[14]
As previously noted, the term twrch in Welsh denotes "wild boar, hog, mole". So Twrch Trwyth means "the boar Trwyth". Its Irish cognate may be Triath, King of the Swine (Irish, Old (to 900);: Triath ri torcraide) or the Torc Triath mentioned in Lebor Gabála Érenn,[15] also recorded as Old Irish Orc tréith "Triath's boar" in Sanas Cormaic. Rachel Bromwich regards the form Trwyth as a late corruption. In the early text Historia Brittonum, the boar is called Troynt or Troit, a Latinisation likely from the Welsh Trwyd. Further evidence that Trwyd was the correct form appears in a reference in a later poem.[16]
The names of the hound and boar Twrch Trwyth are glimpsed in a piece of geographical onomasticon composed in Latin in the 9th century, the Historia Brittonum.Twrch Trwyth (in Welsh pronounced as /tuːɾχ tɾʊɨθ/; also Latin: Troynt (MSS.HK); Troit (MSS.C1 D G Q); or Terit (MSS. C2 L)[17]) is an enchanted wild boar in the Matter of Britain that King Arthur or his men pursued with the aid of Arthur's dog Cavall (Welsh: Cafall, Latin: Cabal).
. Eilert Ekwall. The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place Names. 1960. Oxford University Press. 978-0-19-869103-7. 482.