- River Leen
The River Leen rises in the
Robin Hood Hills just outsideKirkby-in-Ashfield . It then flows through the grounds ofNewstead Abbey , skirtsHucknall , goes throughPapplewick and on throughBestwood Country Park , and following the route of theLeen Valley into suburban and urbanNottingham , passing throughBulwell , Basford, Radford, andLenton before joining up with theRiver Trent oppositeWilford .History
Leen is a corruption through various renderings of the Celtic word "llyn", "lake" or "pool", and Anglo‐Saxon "hlynna," meaning "streamlet". Some of the surrounding villages derived their name from the River Leen.
Lenton , "ton" being the Saxon word for "village"; andLinby , "by" being the Danish equivalent of "ton."From Lenton onwards the course of the Leen has been quite radically altered on a number of occasions but the river's present course is believed to follow much the same route as it did originally. [ [http://www.lentontimes.co.uk/images/gallery/river_leen/river_leen_listener_50.htm Lenton Times - River Leen - Lenton Listener] ] Originally it discharged into the
Beeston Canal , flowed some distance along the canal and thence over a small wire into theTinker’s Leen (where the modern Courts complex is now situated) and so into the Trent just downstream ofTrent Bridge .The
University of Nottingham 'sJubilee Campus 'opens up' the river's urban route, as it is brought out of the concrete channel originally built to prevent the flooding of the now-demolished Raleigh cycle factory. The river now passes directly through the heart of the campus, meandering and formed into large lakes before leaving the campus to the south, back under a culvert and throughLenton .References
* Trent Water Authority – Official Handbook (1973)
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