15/01/2018

Calne: Spelling variants over time

Arms of the Guild and Stewards of Calne, from
The Visitation of Wiltshire 1623.
Place names, like surnames, have not been static over time. The spelling of most words has changed during the centuries, some more drastically than others (Cherhill was Ciriel in 1155 and Chirieli in 1198, Yatesbury was Getesbir in 1226). Some places, however, do return to older variants of their name, such as East and West Kennett. They were East and West Kennet (single 't'), the same as the local river, but changed back to an older spelling 'Kennett' in the 1970s.

Using The Place Names of Wiltshire by Gover, Mawer and Stenton, we find that the spelling (and presumably the pronunciation) of Calne has changed at least 10 times since it first entered written history. This can only ever include variants that have been written down, have survived, and then subsequently found - there may have been many more variants, sometimes more clearly heard in pronounciations (something which even current residents of Calne known about).


Variant Earliest Date Source
Calne  955 Cartularium Saxonicum, ed. W. de Gray Birch, 3 vols., London 1885-93.
æt Cálne  978 Anglo Saxon Chronicle
et Calnæ 997 Codex Diplomaticus Aevi Saxonici, ed. J. M. Kemble, 6 vols., London 1839-48.
Cauna, Caune  1086 Domesday Book
Calna  1091 Vetus registrum Sarisberiense alias dictum Registrum S. Osmundi, Episcopi (Rolls Series), 2 vols., 1883-84.
Kalne  1158 Report on Manuscripts in Various Collections, 8 vols. (Historical Manuscripts Commission), 1901-23
Calne  1198 Placitorum Abbrevatio (Record Commission), London 1811.
Kaune  1236 Calendar of Close Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office
Calle al. Calne  1460 Calendar of Patent Rolls (Public Record Office)
Cawne  1556 Feet of Fines, 1273-1760 (unpublished) in the Public Record Office.
Cawen  t. Eliz (1558-1603) Calendar of Proceedings in Chancery in the Reign of Queen Elizabeth, ed. J. Bayley, 3 vols. (Record Commission), London 1827-32.
Caln  1588 Wiltshire Notes and Queries, 8 vols., 1893
Cawlne  1588 MS Collections of John Sadler in Wilts Museum at Devizes.
Cane  1672 Admission to the College of St John the Evangelist, 4 vols., Cambridge 1882-1931
Caln and Calne 1753 Britannia Depicta road atlas featured both 'Caln' and 'Calne' on the same page, leading me to think that 'Caln' was the abbraviated version. It was printed by Emanuel Bowen and John Owen's firm and is based from earlier work by John Ogilby (c. late 1600s).


What we can see though is that while the spelling of Calne has changed throughout history, it has tended to return back to being spelled 'Calne'. Considering that the historical record for the town is over 1000 years, it has remained quite stable. However, we can see that the 1500s saw a few variants: Cawne, Cawen, Caln, Cawlne, with Caln and Cawlne both being written in 1588.

With the onset of modern English and the prevealence of writing as a form of communication, there was greater stability in spelling and we stuck with Calne, while our Town Twin in Pennsylvania uses the variant Caln.

References: 

Gover, J., Mawer, A. and Stenton, F. (1970). The place-names of Wiltshire. Cambridge: At the University Press.
Placenames.org.uk. (2017). The Historical Gazetteer of England's Place-names. [online] Available at: http://placenames.org.uk/browse/mads/epns-deep-16-b-subparish-000188 [Accessed 12 Sep. 2017].