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The following appear as names for Armitage. Follow the links for what the author actually said:
| Name | Author | Source |
|---|---|---|
| ARMITAGE | John Marius Wilson | Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales (Edinburgh: A Fullarton & Co., 1870-72). |
| ARMITAGE AND HANDSACRE | John Bartholomew | Gazetteer of the British Isles (Edinburgh: Bartholomew, 1887). |
| HERMITAGE | Thomas Pennant | The Journey from Chester to London (London: Wilkie and Robinson, 1811). |
NB: These variant names come from our collections of historical travel writing and descriptive gazetteers:
These names were used for units associated with Armitage. Click on the links for details of the units and their names:
| Name | Unit Type | Source |
|---|---|---|
| ARMITAGE | Ecclesiastical Parish (EP) | F. Youngs, Local Administrative Units: Northern England (London: Royal Historical Society, 1991), p. 402. |
| Parish-level Unit (AP/CP) | F. Youngs, Local Administrative Units: Northern England (London: Royal Historical Society, 1991), p. 402. | |
| ARMITAGE AND HANDSACRE | Parish-level Unit (AP/CP) | 1881 Census of England and Wales, Table 4, 'Area, Houses, and Population of Civil Parishes in the several Registration Sub-Districts in 1871 and 1881'. |
| ARMITAGE WITH HANDSACRE | Modern (2024) Ward | Office for National Statistics, Open Geography Portal (Wards (December 2024) Names and Codes in the UK) |
| Parish-level Unit (AP/CP) | 1951 Census of England and Wales, Table 3, 'Acreage, Population, Private Households and Dwellings', for 'AC, MB, UD, RD; Wards of CB, MB; CP, NT'. | |
| E05010652 | Modern (2024) Ward | Office for National Statistics, Open Geography Portal (Wards (December 2024) Names and Codes in the UK) |
NB: These are all the names of all the administrative units which we have associated with Armitage, and you must judge whether all or even any of them are variant names for the place. They may well include the names of other locations or areas:
Every name listed here is linked to the particular historical source in which it appears, but we cannot claim that these are all the historical names of Armitage, or that our references are to the first usage of the names. Similarly, we have tried to ensure that names included here are not transcription errors by ourselves, but it is possible they are the result of errors made when the historical sources were printed, or the result of visiting authors or census officials mis-hearing local names.