Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Windsor Castle: With a Description of the Park, Town, and Neighbourhood
Henry III. The derivation is more than doubtful. The name was applied originally to Old Windsor only, and has, 'most probably, some connexion with the not very distant Windlesham, 'which is pro nounced 'winsham.' In anglo-saxon, 'windle' is a willow, and 'ofer' is a Shore; but'windle' may refer to the winding course Of the Thames, and 'ofer' may have been softened into 'oure, ' and eventually 'or.' There is a river or brook called the Windles, which runs into the Thames at Chertsey; but Chertsey is too far from Windsor to allow Of the connexion which Harrison, in the 'description Of Britain' prefixed to his edition Of Hollinshead, would appear to attempt. AS we shall see a little farther on, no physical feature of the modern Windsor can be taken into account in stating these questions, because, though the name is borrowed from the neighbouring parish, the town and the castle really stand in Clewer.
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