Old English Names: Difference between revisions

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There are two views on how to find an '''Old English Name''' for your [[persona]].
Old manuscripts can be useful for finding Old English names. New Testament names like Mary, Joseph, John, and Elizabeth were common as well. Baby name books usually aren't helpful unless they tell what century and country it came from.


# Old [[manuscript]]s can be useful for finding [[Old English]] [[Name]]s. [[Bible|New Testament]] names like Mary, Joseph, John, and Elizabeth were common as well. Baby name [[book]]s usually aren't helpful unless they tell what century and country it came from.
# In fact, New Testament names were not generally used in [[England]] until after the [[Norman Conquest]], except by [[priest|clerics]]. The fashion for using New Testament names spread through Western [[Europe]] in the [[10th century|10th]] to [[12th century|12th centuries]]. The best way to choose a name that fits your culture is to pick one that was actually used there.


The competing authors of these views may have been interpreting the title of this page differently:
# Old English names = names in [[medieval]] (=old) [[England]]
# Old English names = names in England during the period of the [[Old English]] [[language]]
== External Links ==
== External Links ==
[http://www.medievalscotland.org/scotnames/quickgaelicbynames/ Scottish/Gaelic Names]
* [http://www.medievalscotland.org/scotnames/quickgaelicbynames/ Scottish/Gaelic Names]
[http://www.panix.com/~mittle/names/ First names in Breton and German bynames]
* [http://s-gabriel.org/names/ Medieval Names Archive]

[[category:Old English]]

Latest revision as of 11:04, 15 June 2006

There are two views on how to find an Old English Name for your persona.

  1. Old manuscripts can be useful for finding Old English Names. New Testament names like Mary, Joseph, John, and Elizabeth were common as well. Baby name books usually aren't helpful unless they tell what century and country it came from.
  2. In fact, New Testament names were not generally used in England until after the Norman Conquest, except by clerics. The fashion for using New Testament names spread through Western Europe in the 10th to 12th centuries. The best way to choose a name that fits your culture is to pick one that was actually used there.

The competing authors of these views may have been interpreting the title of this page differently:

  1. Old English names = names in medieval (=old) England
  2. Old English names = names in England during the period of the Old English language

External Links