cony-warren

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coney warren, n. meanings, etymology and more
The earliest known use of the noun coney warren is in the early 1600s. OED's earliest evidence for coney warren is from 1616, in a translation by Gervase ... www.oed.com
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Giant wormholes, Coney Warren - Out and About - WordPress.com
I came across these holes in the gritstone boulders. I thought at first they were at attempt at splitting the stone but at about 2” diameter they're too big ... fhithich.wordpress.com
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Coney | A Writer's Perspective
Rabbits, known as coneys or conyngs, were reared in warrens. In the Middle Ages this just meant land set aside for rearing small game. aprilmunday.wordpress.com
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cony-warren
cony-warren [See cony.] A rabbit-warren.1635 Brereton Trav. (1844) 71, I observed a coney-warren walled about with stone. 1655 Hartlib Ref. Silk-worm 17 The multiplying of Cunny-warrens. 1795 Hull Advertiser 28 Nov. 2/2 The Manor and Soke of Caistor, with the Royalty, Coney Warren, and encroachment ... Oxford English Dictionary
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Warren (burrow) - Wikipedia
A warren is a network of interconnected burrows, dug by rabbits. Domestic warrens are artificial, enclosed establishments of animal husbandry en.wikipedia.org
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Cony Warren photos, maps, books, memories - Francis Frith
Browse our selection of vintage and retro black & white photographs of Cony Warren, along with old maps, local history books, and fascinating memories that ... www.francisfrith.com
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Warren (burrow)
Such an enclosure or close was called a cony-garth, or sometimes conegar, coneygree or "bury" (from "burrow"). Pillow mounds The most characteristic structure of the "cony-garth" ("rabbit-yard") is the pillow mound. wikipedia.org
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The Deer Park And Cony Warren At Charlecote | 19
At some time in the middle of the sixteenth century, William Sheldon, a prosperous landowner in Warwickshire and Worcestershire, set up a tapestry-weaving. www.taylorfrancis.com
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[PDF] Spring | Bolton Abbey
CONEY WARREN. Once a valuable source of meat for Barden Tower. Can you see what type of meat it was? 1. Start: Sandholme Car Park. Distance: 6.4km / 4 miles. boltonabbey.com
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Conywarren Townland, Co. Tyrone
Conywarren is a townland in Omagh Rural ED, in Cappagh (Upper Strabane portion) Civil Parish, in Barony, in Co. Tyrone, Ireland. www.townlands.ie
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warren - Yorkshire Historical Dictionary
In 1599-1600, the cony warren within the lordship of Settrington was surveyed and a memorandum noted that in Anncient tyme the conye warren was planted in ... yorkshiredictionary.york.ac.uk
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warren
▪ I. warren, n.1 (ˈwɒrən) Forms: 4 wareine, 4–5 wareyne, 5 warenne, warreyne, 5–6 -ayn, wareyn, war(r)ane, 6 warryn, 6–7 waren, warraine, 7 warrin, 5– warren; β. 4–5 warraynte, 5 warand(e, -ant, 5–6 warraunte, 6, 8 warrant. [a. AF. warenne, North-eastern OF. warenne, waresne (whence AL. warenna), co... Oxford English Dictionary
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Free warren
Free warren and domestic warren The original use of free warren was as a legal term. Manwood The most cited authority on forest law, John Manwood, cites these beasts of warren: "The beasts and fouls of Warren are these, The Hare, the Cony wikipedia.org
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cony
▪ I. cony, coney, n. (ˈkəʊnɪ, ˈkʌnɪ) Pl. conies (coneys). Forms: α. 2 cunin, 3 konyng, 4–5 conyng(e, 5 conninge, -ynge, konyne, 5–6 cunning, cunyng, -ing; β. 2 cunig, 4 conig, 5 connyg; γ. 6–7 conie, conye, connie, -ye, conny, conney, cunnie, cunney, 6–8 cunny, 4– cony, 6– coney. [The current form r... Oxford English Dictionary
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Cunicularium
The common, or domestic warren developed out of the free warren hunting franchise. Such a close was called a "cony-garth". A rabbit escaped from the cony-garth was the property of the freeholder. wikipedia.org
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