Power and place-names: did early English rulers use Roman-style province names?

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Power and place-names: did early English rulers use Roman-style province names?

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Power and place-names: did early English rulers use Roman-style province names? Keith Briggs keith.briggs@bt.com Visiting Research Fellow, Linguistics, UWE http://keithbriggs.info Power and place in Later Roman and early medieval Europe: interdisciplinary perspectives on governance and civil organization UCL Institute of Archaeology 2011-11-11 Friday 1500 1530

A little motivation Assyria = Assyriġe Babylonia = Babiloniġe salmuria = sælmeriġe brine Elia = Eliġe Ely Sturia = Sturiġe Sturry

i y Vowels 1 0 W u e ø I Y E œ 9 8 @ 3 Æ U 7 o 2 O æ 5 a A 6 The standard Jones vowel diagram, showing schwa (/@/) in relation to /e/ and /a/. Front vowels are to the left; a point in the diagram correponds to the position of the highest point of the tongue. Unstressed /a/ is liable to be modified to /@/, though OE had no way to represent this in writing except e. Right-hand members of pairs have lip-rounding.

Pre-English Latin -ia place-names Pliny: Scadinavia Vulgate : Aegyptia, Aethiopia, Alexandria, Antiochia, Apollonia, Appia, Arabia, Arimathia, Armenia, Asia, Babylonia, Bethania, Calvaria, Cappadocia, Frygia, Galatia, Gallia, Graecia, Hadria, Hispania, India, Italia, Iudaia, Lybia, Lycia, Lydia, Macedonia, Media, Mesopotamia, Pamphilia, Philadelphia, Samaria, Syria Roman coins mid-310s : Alamannia, Francia Merovingian : Austria, Austrasia, Neustria Gothic : Visigoths (c.590) gens vel patria Gothorum... Spania, Gallia et Gallaecia; Ostrogoths: Italia

English Latin -ia place-names ASC : Alemanie, Aluearnie, Bataille, Clunig, Elig, Hloðeringa, Hungrie, Ispanie, Lumbardige, Manige, Normandig, Sicilie 10th century coins : Brydia, Bridiga, Brydige

Old English *ġē district Supposed cognate of German Gau Found (if at all) only in place-names But does Gau really exist? It is south German and normally a suffix (-gawi) only OE cognate should be **ġēġ!

The place-name Ely Normal OE form Elig Indeclinable! Not parallel to surrounding -ēġ names Usual theory: OE -ġē But then why -ig? Base form might be Latin Elia Elia < Ælia??

The Thorney Fragment frā eliz [to w]itlesige and of eliz to ðornize. From Michelle Brown, Manuscripts from the Anglo-Saxon age, British Library 2007, Plate 133; reproduced with permission. c British Library Board BL Add. MS 61735.

The place-name Surrey Sudrige Bede Sudrig, Sudrige ASC Suðerie, Suþrigum etc. charters If from *ġē, the -i- is unexplained I propose the etymology sūðr-ia with base south Perhaps named by an early bishop of London

The place-name Eastry to Eastorege 805 832 (9th) on Eosterge 811 (9th) I propose the etymology ēast(o)r-ia with base east The name is actually exactly what we would expect as a regular development of Latin Austria!

The place-name Sturry TERRAM IN STURIA 679 S:8 cf. super ripam Sturiae 9th for the Stör terram que sita est in Sturige c. 690 (13th) Etymology is river-name Stūr +ia

The place-name Lyminge ad cortem que appellatur Liminge 689 (13th) Etymology is either Celtic lem- elm or perhaps Latin līmen threshold (of Kent) +ia

Brookes map of Kent Stuart Brookes The lathes of Kent: a review of the evidence, Studies in early Anglo-Saxon art and archaeology: papers in honour of Martin G. Welch, ed. by Stuart Brookes, Sue Harrington, and Andrew Reynolds, BAR British series 527, 2011, pp. 156 170

Conclusion The phonology of these names is consistent with an origin in Latin -ia In fact the data fits better than to OE *-ġē, which is of doubtful existence anyway Such an origin would fit into a general picture of seventh and eighth century Romanization in religion, architecture, town planning, law, personal naming... Moreover it would be plausible as an influence from Merovingian and Frankish naming fashions See my paper Early English region-names with the suffix -ia, with a special emphasis on the name Ely for full data and argument