Heworth, Hooch or Hooth Fishery
Heworth, Hooch or Hooth Fishery
HER Number
              12260
          District
              Gateshead
          Site Name
              Heworth, Hooch or Hooth Fishery
          Place
              Heworth
          Map Sheet
              NZ26SE
          Class
              Agriculture and Subsistence
          Site Type: Broad
              Fishing Site
          Site Type: Specific
              Fish Weir
          General Period
              MEDIEVAL
          Specific Period
              Medieval 1066 to 1540
          Form of Evidence
              Documentary Evidence
          Description
              Hooch or Hooth in 1128, Hoch in 1195. 'hoh' is old English for a spur of land. This might be the same fishery as Ledynehughe of 1539, which lay near to Catdenburne. The name may be interpreted as 'Leodwine's hoh'. 'dyne' is old English for declivity. Belonged to the monks. 'Spur of the land with or at the steep slope'. The main catch would have been salmon, but in fact a wider range of fish would have been taken (eg. Eels, pike, minnow, burbot, trout and lamprey' {G.N. Garmondsway (ed), 1939, 'Aelfric's Colloquy', pp 101-2}.
          Easting
              428000
          Northing
              562000
          Grid Reference
              NZ428000562000
    Sources
              Victor Watts, 1986, Some Northumbrian Fishery Names II in Durham Archaeological Journal, 2, 1986, pp 55-61