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Image by John  Parsons

Images by Mike Jupp

Bucgan'ora

The origins of Bognor

Bucge's landing place, 680 AD

Historical Forms

  • Bucgan'ora 680 CS (Cartularium Saxonicum)

  • Bugenor' 1272 RH

  • Buggenor(e) 1275 Cl

  • Bykeneure 1248 Ass

  • Bogenor(e) 1270 FF 1296 SR 1405 Cicestr

  • Bowkenore 1491 Ct

  • Bagnor 1823 G

Source

Etymology

'Bucge's ora or bank.' The 1248 form is due to confusion with Bignor infra 124. There is no doubt that the normal development of this name would have been to Bugnor (the forms with o in ME are spelling-forms with o for u ) and that pronunciation is perhaps suggested by Greenwood's spelling. The modem form is probably in part a spelling pronunciation and in part a piece of would-be polite English.

Source

About Bucge


Bucge was the name of the female Saxon leader of the first recorded settlement on the south coast of Britain between Pagham to the west and Felpham to the east, as part of the emerging realm of Sussex.


The settlement was established as a fishing and farming community around 680 BCS 10th and was known as Bucgan ora which means Bucge’s shore, bank or landing place.

The earliest land deeds were recorded in the bōcland, the Saxon charter of land tenure.  Unchartered lands were known as folcland, or the commoner’s land, known as commons.


The first recorded history was in the Domesday Book of 1086 which referred to the land of Sūþsexe, meaning South Saxons.  In the 7th century it was part of the Saxon Heptarchy of 7 emerging Kingdoms, covering what we know today as England.


Back to Bucge - the name derives from the Saxon name for the beech tree “bēce“ or "bōc" (referring to beech bark) which would have been prevalent across Northern Europe in the 6th and 7th centuries.


The bōc was revered by Saxon cultures as the Queen of the Woods, because of its great value to their communities.  It provided shelter, wood, birch bark, mast (beech nuts) and more.  For centuries the northern european cultures traditionally used birch bark to write their records on.  The bōc is the root of the modern term ‘book’.


As the respected community guardian, Bucge would most likely have been named for her ability to protect and sustain her community and maybe even to write words about their culture, customs and traditions a village bōc.

Origins of Bognor
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