Pinner View, HA2

Place Name

Literal, as this road is laid out on higher ground overlooking Pinner.First written down as Pinnora in 1232 it means either the pin-shaped river bank, referring to the humped ridge traversing Pinner Park, or the peg-shaped or pointed flat topped hill. The named was formed by the Old English words pinn and ōra, which David Mills in a Dictionary of London Place Names says referred to “the elongated ridge in Pinner Park, to the south of which is Lower Hill”. It has also been suggested that the first part pinn may be a reference to someone’s name and the second part may come from ōra, meaning hill or from the Latin for bank or slope. Either way the name stuck and by 1332 it was spelt Pinnere and in 1483 Pynnor.

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