- The
Snickelways of York,
often misspelt Snickleways, are a
collection of
narrow streets and
alleys in the city of York, England. The word
Snickelway was...
-
other types of alley.
Other related terms include snicket,
tenfoot and
snickelway.
Suburban streets in Sydney,
Australia similarly feature "cut-throughs"...
-
Badger inn. The Hole-in-the-Wall
snickelway (also
known as
Little Peculiar Lane), the
shortest official snickelway in the city,
leads off its north-east...
-
rights to fish
belonged to the Crown. A
feature of
central York is the
Snickelways,
narrow pedestrian routes, many of
which led
towards the
former market-places...
- of The
Shambles showing the
buildings to be removed.
There are five "
snickelways" that lead off the
Shambles because they used to be
small alleyways in...
- far as to
merge the
latter two
terms with
alleyway to form the term
snickelways.
These small streets can be
cobbled or block-paved;
pitched paving is...
-
according to legend, it
preys on lone
travellers in the city's
narrow Snickelways. Furthermore, the
building at
number 1 The
Shambles is
named Barghest...
-
Dictionaries – English.
Archived from the
original on 4
August 2012. "
Snickelways-YorkWalk" (PDF). VisitYork.org.
Retrieved 1 June 2020 – via thedms.co...
- from gally, to frighten. A
Barghest (or Barguest) is said to roam the
Snickelways and side
roads of York,
preying on p****ersby, and has also been seen...
- that the
remains can be
viewed from the inside. They are
accessed by a
snickelway,
running between numbers 50 and 52 Stonegate. The south-east wall is believed...