I didnt read the book but on another website with this question it said overgrazing destroyed the village.
OVERGRAZING!!!
From a surname which was originally from a place name meaning "clay settlement" in Old English. It's the name of a village in Sussex, in the south of England
The surname Bingham is English in origin. It denoted people from an old English village of the same name, now located in Nottinghamshire. Etymologically it comes from the Norse word "bingr" meaning "byre/manger" and the Olde English "ham" meaning "homestead/farm".
The last name Green is one of the most common and widespread of English surnames. Either a nickname for someone who was fond of dressing in this color from Old English grene or a topographic name for someone who lived near a village green.
Pioneer Village, located on Highway 6, Minden, Nebraska and Old Sturbridge Village, located in Sturbridge, Massachusetts are both Colonial Museum Villages in the US.
In Old English they did not use the letter k but the word "cyle" is the Old English word for "cold".
standard commons
Old St. Paul's .
thorp or thorpe is the old English suffix for a town or village, such as 'weaverthorpe' in Yorkshire. There is no set or even average size for a village.
LEIGH is old English for woods or forest and TON is old English for town. So Leighton is derived from an old English term for people who came from a town/village in or near the woods.
This is just more info on the game... You start playing in the morning. Then you go around the destroyed village looking for stuff. Then you can go into this cave, but you get attacked. You get poisoned and have to find a fountain to cure it. The music at the beginning of the cinematic is really memorable... Please help
The word "village" originated from the Latin word "villaticus," which referred to a country estate or farm. It later evolved to "villagium" in Old French, eventually becoming "village" in English.
It is an old English word meaning a quarry. Now the name of a village in Greater Manchester
It is probably from the Old English for 'village' or 'hamlet'. Eventually it came to mean a dairy farm. Gatwick meant goat-farm.
A black and white village is any of several old English villages which are characterized by timbered and half-timbered houses with black oak beams and white walls.
Old Economy Village was created in 1824.
The root of the word "home" is believed to originate from the Old English word "ham" or "hām," which referred to a village or estate. Over time, the term evolved to represent the concept of a permanent residence or dwelling place.
"by" was an old English for a town or village, hence the term "by-law" referring to a law made for a specific town/area.