The name "Grim's Ditch" is
Old English in origin. The Anglo-Saxon word
dīc was pronounced "deek" in northern England and "deetch" (
dīċ) in the south. The method of building this type of earthwork involved digging a trench and forming the upcast soil into a bank alongside it. This practice has resulted in the name
dīc being given to either the trench or the bank, and this evolved into two words,
ditch and
dyke, in modern British English. The origin of the name
Grim is shrouded in mystery, but there are several theories as to its origin. Many ancient earthworks of this name exist across England and Wales, pre-dating the
Anglo Saxon settlement of Britain. It was common for the Anglo Saxons to name features of unexplained or mysterious origin
Grim.
Danish Vikings The name
Grim was a common
Old Danish personal-name during the
Viking Age. Many English placenames are derived from the name, especially in those areas where people of Scandinavian origin settled. The placename
Grimston is particularly common. The name was associated with the Norse god
Óðinn, known as
Wōden to the
Anglo Saxons. The name was also associated with the attribute of being fierce or "fierce faced". The name may have been used as a
metaphor for a person of
Danish Viking origin, and hence the
Devil.
Association with Woden The name of Wōden is thought by some historians to be evident in
Wansdyke, an ancient earthwork of uncertain origin which runs from
Wiltshire to
Somerset. The historian
W. H. Stevenson draws a link between
Grim, the Saxon alias for Wōden, and the name of Grim's Dyke:
Frank Stenton notes that there is no direct evidence that Wōden was known in England as Grim, but (citing supporting claims by Professor
Eilert Ekwall) states that it was very probable. He mentions three sites named
Grimes Wrosen: one outside
Colchester in Essex; another in
Warwickshire on the route of the
Roman road Watling Street; and
Credenhill in Herefordshire. These earthworks, Stenton asserts, were either considered to have been the supernatural work of Wōden himself, or sites connected strongly with the cult of Wōden where the Anglo-Saxons worshipped the god. Among Woden's many roles is that of a god of war, and it may be that the Anglo-Saxons perceived the earthworks as military in function and therefore ascribed them to him. Another suggested origin of
Grim may be in the Celtic name
Grin or
Gryn (
Gryan in
Irish, a putative origin of the name
Ryan), a signifier of the
Sun as a divinity.
Association with the Devil The identities of Wōden and the
Devil have also become
conflated, as evidenced in the number of earthworks named after the Devil. As the Anglo-Saxon population
converted to the new religion of Christianity, baptised converts
renounced the old Saxon Gods along with the works of the Devil. It is thought that, as a result of this Christianisation, place names and features once associated with pre-Christian deities then came to be associated with the
Devil. Earthworks bearing names related to Grim or the Devil proliferate around Britain: Grim's Ditches exist in Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Hampshire, Hertfordshire, Oxfordshire and West Yorkshire, and Devil's Dykes exist in
Sussex,
Cambridgeshire,
Norfolk (near
Weeting) and
Hertfordshire. The
Antonine Wall which once separated
Scotland from
Roman Britain is also sometimes known as ''Graham's Dyke''. In Suffolk, a large
Neolithic flint mine is known as
Grime's Graves. Beyond Britain, a set of
Roman Limes on the borders of Hungary, Romania and Serbia are sometimes known as the
Devil's Dykes in Hungarian. ==Berkshire==