Balham Hill, SW12

Place Name

Literal. A hill in Balham. John Field in his study Place Names of Greater London speculates that it could come from one of two sources, either meaning a riverside pasture belonging to a Saxon called Bealga, who built his homestead on the Roman road of Stane Street, which ran from Chichester to London or a “rounded riverside pasture”. Hamm often meant land within the bend of a river. It was first mentioned as Bœlgenham in AD957 in the Anglo Saxon charters, by the time of the Domesday Book of 1086 it was recorded as Belgeham, and by 1472 it was recorded as Balam. This street recalls the old name for the area because until the mid-19thCentury, Balham was still a rural hamlet, called Balham Hill.

 

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