The name of Wincanton is first attested in 1084, in the forms
Wincainietone and
Wincautone. In the
Domesday Book of 1086, the name is spelled
Wincaleton. The town's name comes from the name of the River Cale, which runs through the town and was in
Old English called , combined with the
Old English word , "estate, settlement". It thus once meant "estate on the River Cale". The origin of the name of the River Cale itself is less clear. It is first attested in a fourteenth-century copy of a
charter from 956, where it appears in the forms
Cawel and
Wricawel, the latter of which is agreed to be a scribal error for
*Wincawel. The leading suggestion for the origin of this name is that
cawel is the
Brittonic word, meaning "basket", found in
Cornish as and
Welsh as (borrowed from the Latin word * 'basket'). If so, the baskets were perhaps
fish-traps, and the river was named for their use in it. The
win- element is the Brittonic word meaning "white", and was not necessarily used literally: different arms of the same river were regularly distinguished by being labelled "white" and "black" (as in the rivers
Whiteadder and
Blackadder). ==History==