The place-name 'Shincliffe' is first attested in the
Liber Vitae Ecclesiae Dunelmensis of circa 1085, where it appears as
Scinneclif. It appears in the
Charter Rolls of 1195 as
Sineclive. The name means 'the cliff of the spectre or demon, haunted cliff'. Shincliffe is the site of a mediaeval bridge over the
River Wear and archaeological investigations in 2005 suggest Shincliffe may have been the site of a Roman crossing. In the Middle Ages Shincliffe was an agricultural community belonging to the
Prior of
Durham Cathedral. The population grew significantly due to coal mining at nearby
Houghall,
Old Durham and Shincliffe Colliery (now
High Shincliffe) but declined following
mine closures in the late 19th century. Durham's first railway station opened at Shincliffe in 1839 as the passenger terminus between the Durham area and
Sunderland but closed in 1893 once a line had been run from Sherburn House to Durham itself. A goods line continued to
Houghall and
Croxdale Colliery. In the 1920s, Back Lane along the eastern side of the village was enlarged to become a bypass for it. ==Local features==