Re: Origin of name: "Arthur"
Almost all the names from this era have disappeared completely, and many were never recorded (the same goes for contemporary Welsh names). "Ubiquitous" is a stretch, a mention in a few poems and mythologoical histories of one individual, later expanded and made popular in Medieval romances, v. 4 or 5 rather anonymous individuals in Anglo-Danish Britain and France. We know of a number only because their names are recorded on coins as the "moneyer" - as new hoards are found, new names are discovered nowhere else recorded. There are, at a minimum, probably 100,000 Germanic dithematic names. But the names, and (gendered deuterothemes) recorded are almost always the of important men, less often women, rarely those of common men such as the moneyers and bondsman we know named Arthor/Arnthor, practically never those of common women. Consider Hals- (holy), by the number of places named Helsing (including Helsinki) once a very common prototheme in Scandinavia, but otherwise completely unrecorded except for a single name, and that not in Scandinavia, but Britain.
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Messages

Origin of name: "Arthur"  ·  Mike  ·  8/20/2020, 3:31 PM
Re: Origin of name: "Arthur"  ·  Amphelise  ·  8/22/2020, 1:05 PM
Re: Origin of name: "Arthur"  ·  elbowin  ·  8/27/2020, 3:37 PM
Re: Origin of name: "Arthur"  ·  thegriffon  ·  8/27/2020, 2:44 PM
Re: Origin of name: "Arthur"  ·  Amphelise  ·  8/28/2020, 1:10 AM
Re: Origin of name: "Arthur"  ·  thegriffon  ·  8/29/2020, 9:21 AM
Re: Origin of name: "Arthur"  ·  Amphelise  ·  8/29/2020, 12:20 PM
Re: Origin of name: "Arthur"  ·  thegriffon  ·  8/30/2020, 8:27 AM
Re: Origin of name: "Arthur"  ·  Amphelise  ·  8/31/2020, 12:54 PM
Re: Origin of name: "Arthur"  ·  thegriffon  ·  9/4/2020, 8:57 AM
Re: Origin of name: "Arthur"  ·  thegriffon  ·  8/21/2020, 10:24 AM