Stainmore is a remote geographic area in the Pennines on the border of Cumbria, County Durham and North Yorkshire.[2][3] The name is used for a civil parish in the Westmorland and Furness of Cumbria, England, including the villages of North Stainmore and South Stainmore. The parish had a population of 253 in the 2001 census,[4] increasing to 264 at the Census 2011.[1] Stainmore Forest stretches further east into County Durham, towards Bowes.[5]
The place-name 'Stainmore' is first attested in a document of circa 990, where it appears as Stanmoir. It appears as Stanmore in the Charter Rolls for the reign of Henry II, and as Staynmor in the Placita de Quo Warranto of 1292. The name means 'stony moor'.[9]
^Eilert Ekwall.The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-names, p.436.
^Roger of Wendover's Flowers of History, Comprising the History of England from the Descent of the Saxons to A. D. 1235 Formerly Ascribed to Matthew Paris, trans. by J. A. Giles, 2 vols (London: Bohn, 1849), I, 256 (s.a. 950) https://archive.org/details/rogerofwendovers01rogemiss.
Collingwood, W.G. (1927), "Rey-Cross"(PDF), Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society, Series 2 (27): 1–10, doi:10.5284/1063347
Vyner, Blaise; Robinson, Pip; Annis, R. G.; Pickin, John (2001), Stainmore. The Archaeology of a North Pennine Pass, Tees Archaeology Monographs 1 and English Heritage, ISBN0 9532747 0 5