Pop. (1901) 2548. It is divided by the river into East Looe and
West Looe; and is sheltered so completely by the surrounding
hills that myrtles, geraniums, fuchsias and other delicate plants
flourish at all seasons in the open air. Its lanes are narrow,
steep and winding; many of the houses are entered by wooden
staircases; and though considerably modernized the town has
a medieval air. Inland, the shores of the river are richly wooded;
and towards the sea they rise on the south into rugged cliffs.
The parish church of St Martin, which stands 1 m. outside the
town, has a Norman doorway and font. Among other buildings
may be mentioned the ancient chapel of St Nicholas in West
Looe, restored in 1862; and the old town-hall, where the ancient
pillory is preserved. A considerable export trade in copper, tin
and granite was formerly carried on, and the last is still exported,
but the chief trade is in grain; while timber, coal and limestone
are imported. There are also thriving fisheries, the Looe fishermen
being particularly expert with the seine on a rocky bottom.
The inlet of Trelawne is one of the most exquisite wooded coombes
in Cornwall. At its head are the remains of a camp, connected
with the Giant’s Hedge, a raised earthwork which extends for
7 m. in a straight line, as far as a larger camp, on Bury Down,
and is of Danish or Saxon construction. Trelawne, a fine old
mansion belonging to the family of Trelawny, dates in part
from the 15th century, but has been very largely restored.
The harbourage was probably the original cause of settlement at Looe. At the time of the Domesday Survey East Looe was assessed under Pendrym, which was of the king’s demesne and West Looe under Hamelin’s manor of Trelowia. In the 14th century the former manor was held by the family of Bodrugan; the latter by that of Dauney, who had inherited it from the Treverbyns. In 1237 Henry Bodrugan received the grant of a market on Fridays and a fair at Michaelmas in his manor of Pendrym. In 1301 his grandson and namesake granted to East Looe a market and fair, view of frank pledge, ducking stool and pillory and assize of bread and ale. Otto Bodrugan in 1320 granted the burgesses the privilege of electing their own portreeve and controlling the trade of the town. A charter of incorporation was granted in 1558 under which the common council was to consist of a mayor and 8 chief burgesses. There was to be a court of record, a market on Saturdays and fairs at Michaelmas and Candlemas. In 1685 James II. provided that there should be a mayor and 11 aldermen, 36 free burgesses, 4 fairs and a court of pie powder. East Looe was governed under this charter until 1885. West Looe (known also as Porpighan or Porbuan) benefited by a charter granted by Richard king of the Romans to Odo Treverbyn and ratified in 1325 constituting it a free borough whose burgesses were to be free of all custom throughout Cornwall. Residence for a year and a day within the borough conferred freedom from servitude. There were to be a market on Wednesdays and a fair at Michaelmas. Hugh son of Odo Treverbyn gave West Looe the privileges enjoyed by Helston and Launceston. Upon the attainder of the earl of Devon in 1539 the borough fell to the crown and was annexed to the duchy. In 1574 a charter of incorporation was granted, providing for a mayor and 11 burgesses, also for a market on Wednesdays and two fairs. West Looe continued to be administered under this charter until 1869, when the death of the mayor deprived the council of its only surviving member and elector. Parliamentary representation was conferred upon East Looe in 1571 and upon West Looe in 1553. In the debate on the reform bill O’Connell stated that there was but one borough more rotten than East Looe and that was West Looe. Looe was second only to Fowey as a port in the 15th century. It furnished 20 ships for the siege of Calais. Of the markets and fairs only the markets on Wednesdays and Saturdays and a fair on the 6th of May remain.
LOOM, or Loon (Icelandic, Lómr), a name applied to water-birds
of three distinct families, remarkable for their clumsy gait
on land.[1] The first is the Colymbidae, to which the term diver
(q.v.) is usually restricted in books; the second the Podicipedidae,
or grebes (q.v.); and the third the Alcidae. The form loon is
most commonly used both in the British Islands and in North
America for all species of the genus Colymbus, or Eudytes according
to some ornithologists, frequently with the prefix sprat,
indicating the fish on which they are supposed to prey; though
it is the local name of the great crested grebe (Podiceps cristatus)
wherever that bird is sufficiently well known to have one; and,
as appears from Grew (Mus. Reg. Soc. p. 69), it was formerly
given to the little grebe or dabchick (P. fluviatilis or minor).
The other form loom seems more confined in its application to
the north, and is said by T. Edmonston (Etym. Gloss. Shetl.
and Orkn. Dialect, p. 67) to be the proper name in Shetland
of Colymbus septentrionalis;[2] but it has come into use among
Arctic seamen as the name of the guillemot (Alca arra or
bruennichi) which throngs the cliffs of northern lands, from
whose “loomeries” they obtain a wholesome food; while the
writer believes he has heard the word locally applied to the
razorbill (q.v.). (A. N.)
LOOM, a machine for weaving fabrics by intersecting the longitudinal threads, the “warp,” i.e. “that which is thrown
across” (O.E. wearp, from weorpan, to throw, cf. Ger. werfen)
with the transverse threads, the “weft,” i.e. “that which is
woven” (O.E. wefta, from wefan, to weave, cf. Ger. weben).
The O.E. geloma and M.E. lome meant an implement or tool of
any kind. In the sense of property, furniture, &c., it appears in
heirloom (q.v.). The earliest example with its specific meaning
quoted by the New English Dictionary is from the Nottingham
Records of 1404 (see Weaving).
“Loom” in the sense of “to appear indistinctly,” to come into view in an exaggerated indistinct shape, must be distinguished from the above word. This appears to have been a sailor’s term for the indistinct or exaggerated appearance of land, a vessel or other object through haze or darkness at sea. It is of obscure origin, but has been connected through the O. Fr. lumer, modern allumer, with Lat. lumen, light, and with the root seen in “lame,” in the sense of “moving slowly towards one.”
LOÓN, the largest town of the province of Bohol, island of
Bohol, Philippine Islands, on the extreme W. coast. Pop. (1903)
18,114. Loón is picturesquely situated on the W. slope of a hill,
and is reached from the sea by steps cut in the rocks. The
harbour is in a sheltered bay on the N. side of the town. The
cultivation of coco-nuts, coffee, cocoa, maguey, tobacco, cotton
and Indian corn, and the raising of livestock are the principal
industries; there is also considerable commerce and some
manufacturing. The language is chiefly Bohol-Visayan.
LOOP. (1) A curve or bend, particularly a bend in a string, rope, &c., formed by doubling back one part so as to leave an
opening; similarly a ring of metal or other material leaving an
aperture. (2) In architecture or fortification, “loop,” more
usually in the form “loophole,” is an opening in the wall of
a building, very narrow on the outside and splayed within,
from which arrows or darts might be discharged on an enemy,
or through which light might be admitted. They are often in
the form of a cross, and generally have round holes at the ends
(see Oillets). (3) The word is also a term in iron and steel
manufacturing for a mass of metal ready for hammering or rolling,
a “bloom.”
This last word is represented in French by loupe, from which it is probably adapted. The earlier English form was also loupe, and it was also applied to precious stones which were of inferior brilliancy; the same also appears in French. Of the word in its two first meanings, a bend or circle in a line of string, metal, rails, &c., and “loophole,” the derivation is uncertain. Skeat takes the word in both meanings to be the same and to be of Scandinavian origin, the old Norwegian hlaup, a leap, being the direct source. The base is the Teutonic hlaufan, to run, to leap, German laufen. The New English Dictionary considers the Swedish example, löp-knut, “running knot,” and others given by Skeat in support of his derivation to be Germanisms, and also that the pronunciation of the word would have been lowp rather than lūp. “Loop” in meaning (2) “loophole” is also taken to be a different word, and is derived from Dutch luipen, to peer, watch. In modern Dutch the word for a narrow opening is gluip.
- ↑ The word also takes the form “lumme” (fide Montagu), and, as Professor Skeat observes, is probably connected with lame. The signification of loon, a clumsy fellow, and metaphorically a simpleton, is obvious to any one who has seen the attempt of the birds to which the name is given to walk.
- ↑ Dunn and Saxby, however, agree in giving “rain-goose” as the name of the species in Scotland.