Welwyn
Welwyn (population 8,425) is a village as well as civil parish in Hertfordshire, England. The parish likewise includes the villages of Digswell and also Oaklands. It is in some cases called Old Welwyn to identify it from the much newer settlement of Welwyn Garden City, regarding a mile to the south, though some citizens do not like the pointer of inability or irrelevance that tends to be suggested by the moniker "Old" and choose Welwyn Town. When claiming where they live, residents will frequently be asked, 'Welwyn or Welwyn Garden City?', as the latter's title is often reduced to merely Welwyn. To avoid complication, there were strategies to transform Welwyn's name to 'Welwyn Minster' in 1990 however this met with regional resistance and the idea was abandoned. The name is derived from Old English welig definition "willow", referring to the trees that snuggle on the financial institutions of the River Mimram as it streams via the village. The name itself is an advancement from weligun, the dative kind of the word, and so is extra specifically converted as "at the willows", unlike neighboring Willian which is most likely to imply merely "the willows". Through having its name stemmed from welig rather than sealh (the much more frequently pointed out Old English word for willow), Welwyn is perhaps cognate with Heligan in Cornwall whose name is originated from helygen, the Cornish word for willow that shares an origin with welig. The neighboring contemporary town of Digswell (around Welwyn North train station) was initially called 'High Welwyn' when first created at the beginning of the 20th century.