https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U8b2pv1JTTA
Transcript:
There are hundreds of major and minor place names in Wirral with Viking origins and you can get a good appreciation of the density of these
names from signposts, such as this one here in the village of Irby, which
itself is a Scandinavian name (‘settlement of the Irish’ or ‘settlement of
Scandinavians from Ireland’).
We're now in the centre of the village of Irby in north Wirral. In front
of us you can see a signpost. It’s not just any old signpost, but it’s a
signpost which points to the past because all or most of the place names on
that signpost are Viking in origin. Moving from right to left, there's Thurstaston,
which means Thorstein’s farmstead; West Kirby, which means the west village of
the church; Thingwall, which means assembly field, the site of the Viking
parliament; Arrowe, which means pasture land away from the farmhouse and then
you can see Pensby and Heswall. So all these places are Viking in origin,
including Irby itself. The only possible exception is Heswall, which may have
been Anglo Saxon, but influenced by the Vikings.
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