Bowerham
←Created page with '{{Infobox UK place | official_name = Bowerham | country = England | region = North West England | coordinates = {{coord|54.041|-2.792|display=inline,title}} | pushpin_map = United Kingdom Lancaster#United Kingdom City of Lancaster | constituency_westminster = Lancaster and Wyre | shire_district = Lancaster | shire_county = Lancashire | dial_code = 01524 | postcode_district = LA1 |...'
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| official_name = Bowerham
| country = England
| region = North West England
| coordinates = {{coord|54.041|-2.792|display=inline,title}}
| pushpin_map = United Kingdom Lancaster#United Kingdom City of Lancaster
| constituency_westminster = [[Lancaster and Wyre (UK Parliament constituency)|Lancaster and Wyre]]
| shire_district = [[City of Lancaster|Lancaster]]
| shire_county = [[Lancashire]]
| dial_code = 01524
| postcode_district = LA1
| post_town = LANCASTER
| static_image = The Bowerham Hotel - geograph.org.uk - 3866248.jpg
| static_image_caption = The Bowerham Hotel
}}
== Origin of the name ==
The name 'Bowerham' is likely a Victorian-era refinement of earlier spelling and pronunciations. An 1844 Ordnance Survey map records a nearby farm called Bowrams,[https://www.lancaster.gov.uk/sites/museums/explore-online/local-history/place-names Place-Names of the Lancaster District - Lancaster City Council]which is considered the probable original site from which the modern name developed.
Historically, the settlement is recorded in a variety of medieval forms. In the early 13th century it appears as Bolerund (1201), Bolron (1212), and Bolrum (1226). The form Bolron remained in use into the early 17th century, and Lancaster's first recorded mayor was 'Robert de Bolron' in 1338.[https://www.lancaster.gov.uk/the-council-and-democracy/civic-and-ceremonial/former-mayors-of-the-city-of-lancaster Former Mayors of the City of Lancaster - Lancaster City Council]
The etymology of the name is thought to derive from Old English and Old Norse roots. The first element is likely connected to "bull" (recorded in early forms as 'bule'), while the second element is believed to come from the Old Norse runnr, meaning thicket or wooded area. Taken together, the original meaning is interpreted as something akin to "the ticket with the bull". This may refer to a location where a valuable breeding bull was kept over successive generations, though this interpretations remains speculative due to the age and scarcity of early records.
== References ==