AGAIN WE HAVE THE AN PREFIX, THIS TIME FOLLOWED BY GOV, OR MORE CORRECTLY GOF, MEANING ‘SMITH’, AS IN BLACKSMITH. OF JUST OVER 300 FOLK OF THIS NAME IN ENGLAND IN 1861, ALL BUT A VERY SMALL NUMBER ARE IN CORNWALL AND OF THAT SMALL NUMBER, ONE FAMILY IN DEVONSHIRE ARE OF CORNISH EXTRACT, MOVING JUST ACROSS THE TAMAR TO WORK AS COPPERSMITHS IN BUCKFASTLEIGH.
Perhaps the most famous or notorious Angof, depending on your point of view, was Michael Joseph, born in St Keverne and a blacksmith by trade. It was he, along with Thomas Flamank of Bodmin, who led the much famed Cornish Rebellion of 1497, when an estimated 15,000 strong uprising of Cornishmen marched on London in protest against taxes imposed by King Henry V11.
The whole episode was doomed to failure and on Saturday 17th June 1497, the uprising was quelled with little bloodshed. The fate of the ringleaders was finally sealed ten days later. An Gof, the Cornish blacksmith along with Thomas Flamank, a lawyer from Bodmin, and James Touchet, seventh Baron Audley from Wells, were all put to death.
This story is from the October/November 2017 edition of myCornwall.
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This story is from the October/November 2017 edition of myCornwall.
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Angove
AGAIN WE HAVE THE AN PREFIX, THIS TIME FOLLOWED BY GOV, OR MORE CORRECTLY GOF, MEANING ‘SMITH’, AS IN BLACKSMITH. OF JUST OVER 300 FOLK OF THIS NAME IN ENGLAND IN 1861, ALL BUT A VERY SMALL NUMBER ARE IN CORNWALL AND OF THAT SMALL NUMBER, ONE FAMILY IN DEVONSHIRE ARE OF CORNISH EXTRACT, MOVING JUST ACROSS THE TAMAR TO WORK AS COPPERSMITHS IN BUCKFASTLEIGH.