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The River Piddle or Trent or North River is a small rural Dorset river which rises in the Dorset Downs and flows into Poole Harbour near Wareham.

River Piddle
River Trent
The River Piddle at Piddlehinton
Location within Dorset
Location
CountryEngland
CountyDorset
Towns and villagesWareham, Tolpuddle, Puddletown, Piddletrenthide
Physical characteristics
SourceAlton Pancras
  locationDorset
Mouth 
  location
Poole Harbour, Purbeck, Dorset
  coordinates
50.6941°N 2.0788°W / 50.6941; -2.0788
Discharge 
  locationPoole Harbour
Basin features
Tributaries 
  leftBere Stream, Devil's Brook

Etymology


The river's name has Germanic origins and has had various spellings over the years.[1] In AD 966 it was called the 'Pidelen', and on the church tower at Piddletrenthide—the first village to which it gives its name—it is spelled 'Pydel'.[1] Several villages which the river passes through are named after it: as well as Piddletrenthide there are Piddlehinton, Puddletown, Tolpuddle, Affpuddle, Briantspuddle and Turnerspuddle. Local legend tells that the Victorians changed the spelling to 'Puddle', due to 'piddle' being a slang term for 'urine'[1] (although Puddletown was still called Piddletown into the 1950s), but see for instance the John Speed map of the county from 1610[2] which has the name 'Puddletown'.


Course and characteristics


In its upper reaches, the Piddle is a chalk stream flowing south through a steep valley cut into the dip slope of the downland,[3] which is dominated by an agricultural landscape of calcareous grassland pasture and arable fields. It rises above the church in Alton Pancras, which was originally named Awultune, a Saxon name meaning the village at the source of a river.

At Puddletown, 6 miles (9.7 km) south of the source, the chalk dips below clay and alluvial sand and gravel geology with a flatter landscape of water-meadows.[3] Here, the Piddle turns to follow an east-south-easterly direction 12 miles (19 km) to Wareham, where it enters Poole Harbour via Wareham Channel. This section of the river runs more or less parallel with its bigger neighbour, the River Frome, together forming a broad, open valley divided by a low ridge of heathland.


Cultural references


Thomas Hardy was born and raised in a cottage at Higher Bockhampton on the ridge between the Piddle and Frome valleys, and the landscape and villages of the valley were inspiration for many of the places in his stories, including Athelhampton House (Athelhall) and Puddletown (Weatherbury).

The Piddle Valley was the subject of Ogden Nash's poem Paradise For Sale, published in the New Yorker in 1959.[4]


See also



Notes





На других языках


[de] River Piddle

Der River Piddle (auch Trent) ist ein Fluss in Dorset, England. Der Fluss entsteht bei Alton Pancras, dessen angelsächsischer Name Awultune ‚Ort an der Quelle des Flusses‘ (River Piddle) bedeutet. Der Piddle fließt in südlicher bzw. südöstlicher Richtung und folgt dabei im wesentlich dem etwas weiter südlich gelegenen River Frome, in dessen Mündungstrichter er östlich von Wareham im Wareham Channel von Poole Harbour mündet. Der River Piddle gehört damit zu den Flüssen, deren Auswaschung zur Bildung des Poole Harbour beigetragen haben.
- [en] River Piddle



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