View Message

name update #104
This update draws heavily from the user-submitted names on this site. Thank you to the volunteer editors and contributors who do such great work curating this collection!https://www.behindthename.com/update/104
https://surnames.behindthename.com/update/104
https://places.behindthename.com/update/104
vote up3vote down

Replies

Thank you Mike for this beautiful update.I saw that there are so many new names! There are a lot of Italian ones! XDI think that your idea of adding the most famous and used compounded names is right! I agree! What about the only name deleted?
vote up1vote down
SOMARLIÐR was moved to SUMARLIÐI, which is better attested.
vote up1vote down
One website says “Old Norse name (maybe from Old English)” https://www.nordicnames.de/wiki/Sumarli%C3%B0i and it lists Sumarliði as the main form and Sumarliðr as a later variant. The Anglo-Saxon form was Sumerlida (with many variations). An Anglo-Saxon origin seems more likely because both elements were also used in other names: Sælida (sea + sailor), Winterlida (Winter + sailor), Sumerfugol (Summer + bird), although none of these were common. In Anglo-Saxon, lid (or lit, or lith) meant a ship or vessel, so lida was a seaman or sailor. Obviously, if the Anglo-Saxon form is the earliest, then it would have been originally a description of Norsemen who raided in the Summer, subsequently taken up as a personal names. The same thing happened with the word Northman.There are some listings of Anglo-Saxons (or Danes) called Sumerlida on these pages:
http://pase.ac.uk/jsp/pdb?dosp=VIEW_RECORDS&st=PERSON_NAME&value=17473&level=1&lbl=Sumerlida
https://archive.org/details/onomasticonangl00seargoog/page/n492
https://archive.org/details/indexsaxonicusa00bircgoog/page/n122
(On that last page, the numbers after the names are not dates, but references to documents.)One document http://www.esawyer.org.uk/charter/1448a.html from about 983 or 985 contains this sentence:
“These are

... Load Full Message

vote up2vote down