when it was Saxon, was called Eorwic, and the legend is that a Duke of Effroc being drowned at the foot of the wall caused this name to be given to the city. Southwark Wall was also called the Effroc Wall or Stone. (Victor Hugo: LʹHomme qui Rit, pt. ii. bk. iii. 1.)
York is Eure-wic (pron. Yorric), and means the town on the Eure, now called the Ouse. The Romans Latinised the wordEure or Eure into “Evora” or “Ebora,” and wic into “vicum;” whence Ebora-vicum, contracted into Eborʹacum.