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River Isle
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The River Isle (also known as the River Ile) flows from its source near Combe St Nicholas, through , England and discharges into the south of near .

Several small springs merge into the river near it then flows north past , , , and , before joining the Parrett. The first section of the river falls in and then falls less steeply falling during the subsequent . As a result, several mills were built on the upper reaches of the river. At least one mill was in existence at the time of the in 1086. These mills were an important part of the local economy connecting with the wool trade.

The road bridge over the river at Knowle St Giles is a Grade II .

A lock was built at the junction with the River Parrett, to maintain water levels, when the was built in the 1830s. The canal joins the river approximately before the confluence with the Parrett.

was built by damming the river in the 1840s to provide water for the .


Tributaries
Near Ilton and Puckington, the Isle is joined by Cad Brook. The name of this stream is first attested in a thirteenth-century copy of a perhaps tenth-century forgery of a purporting to date from 725, as Caducburne. The name is attested again in the fifteenth century as Cadde. The second element of this name is an word meaning "stream", the origin of the first element is less certain. In 1928, guessed that Caduc was a form of a Cada, thus meaning "Caduc's stream".
(1968). 9780198691198, Oxford University Press.
By 1936 he had concluded that the name included a rare Old English word for , cadac, in which case the river name meant "jackdaw stream".Eilert Ekwall, Studies on English Place-names, Kungl. Vitterhets historie och antikvitets akademiens handlingar, 42:1 (Stockholm: Wahlström & Widstrand, 1936), p. 85. has more recently suggested that caduc was actually a Brittonic name for the stream, adopted into Old English with burn as an explanatory addition, related to the Modern Welsh word caddug ("mist, gloom, darkness").Andrew Breeze, 'Cad Green, Ilton, Somerset', in Richard Coates, Andrew Breeze, and David Horovitz, Celtic Voices English Places: Studies of the Celtic Impact on Place-Names in England (Stamford: Tyas, 2000), pp. 83-84 first (2000), 355-56].

The stream gave its name to the hamlet of . By the 1920s, the stream itself seems to have been called the Ding, but recent maps show Cad Brook, suggesting that Cad Green has in turn given its name back to the stream from which it was named.

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