Old Saxon Personal Names Part 2 (Âsuuulf - Daggrîm)

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  • čas přidán 15. 01. 2022
  • In this video, Dr. Scott Shell provides personal names attested in the Old Saxon corpus. This is Part 2 of the sub-series regarding personal names and covers Âsuuulf ('God-Wolf') - Daggrîm ('Day-Mask'). The second set of 10 names out of 125 are provided in this next installment. The names are provided in the attested forms, standardized Heliand forms and runic forms.
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Komentáře • 18

  • @ErichM.L.
    @ErichM.L. Před 2 lety +2

    The great and powerful Dr. Shell returns! Thank you, Dr. Shell, for the continuation of sharing your knowledge with us throughout 2022. It’s pleasant seeing a notification of a new video from this channel.

  • @sarah8383
    @sarah8383 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you.

  • @ingwiafraujaz3126
    @ingwiafraujaz3126 Před 2 lety +1

    Dagobert Duck is the Dutch equivalent of Walt Disney's Scrooge McDuck ;)

  • @berkeleyharbin1787
    @berkeleyharbin1787 Před 2 lety +1

    Looks like you settled into another beautiful setting. On the Name in Runes per Heliand form, is that for a sort of runic orthography?

    • @scottt.shellcontinentalger2464
      @scottt.shellcontinentalger2464  Před 2 lety +5

      I believe the Saxons would have used to the Elder Futhark system. There really wasn't reason for innovation like the OE and ON systems. I argue for this in my upcoming book "Honoring the Saxons: Bringing the Past to the Present."

  • @HroduuulfSonOfHrodger
    @HroduuulfSonOfHrodger Před 2 lety

    Glad to have you back. You must've made it to IL in one piece!? Were you able to connect with Robert in person yet? I'm jealous. Build your community there. Make it strong! We need a return of strength. We need physical, mental, and emotional warriors. Everyone has become so weak thanks to "civilization" and modern religions helping us to become lazy. Our Heathen ancestors were rarely, if ever, lazy. Laziness would probably mean death for the most part. Now mere words can kill us. Oh, how far we've fallen.

  • @ingwiafraujaz3126
    @ingwiafraujaz3126 Před 2 lety +1

    Just one point of feedback: the map you use for Old Saxon speech area corresponds neatly with the Old Saxon "heartland" so to speak but it seems to exclude The Veluwe and parts of The Achterhook area of The Netherlands where people have spoken variants of Saxon since early medieval times (the place names date back to that period and the population has remained stable since then). Not to mention transitional areas between (historically) Frisian, Dutch (currently) and Saxon towards the center of The Netherlands such as Eemland / The Heuvelrug area. I live right next to The Veluwe and feel a little excluded ;) Most maps provided on Google Images and even in history books and academic sources are not exhaustive / nuanced. If you wish, I could email you a few edited versions of popular maps to more accurately reflect the diversity of language variants in The Netherlands.

    • @scottt.shellcontinentalger2464
      @scottt.shellcontinentalger2464  Před 2 lety +2

      Sure, go ahead and send it to me (germanicheathenry@gmail.com). I'd be more than happy to take a look. Thank you. The map I use is from Rauch. Her map is pretty nuanced. She writes the following:
      1. The eastern border, which interpolates Germany and Slavic territory, is generally referred to as the limes saxonicus. This stretches from Kiel in the north to Bardowieck, Lüneburg, Magdeburg, Halle, Merseburg, and perhaps as far as Naumberg.
      2. The southern border, which neighbors the Old High German speech area, cuts across through Allstedt, Sangerhausen, Nordhausen, Duderstadt, to Hedemünden on the Werra, and thence from Münden to south of Olpe.
      3. The western border, neighboring Old Low Franconian ran roughly in a line northward from south of Olpe to Elberfeld, Werden, Essen, Doresten, Bocholt, west of Doetinchen in the present Netherlands, north of Zutphen to Gorssel, and Apeldorn to Elburg on the Zuider Sea.
      4. The northern border, shared with Old Frisian, ran roughly from the Zuider Sea east in a fairly straight line to Groningen, from where the boundary ran to south of Aschendorf to the Ems River and perhaps to the Weser river. Continued to the mouth of the Weser River, north to Cuxhaven.
      5. To the northeast, Old Saxon shared the Eider River as a boundary with Denmark.
      6. The conquering of the Slavic territory in the 12th century expanded the Old Saxon territory eastward over the Oder River to the Vistula River.
      She then provides a map, which looks similar to mine in the video. After all, I modelled mine after hers. Is it possible that you're referring to Old Low German or Old Dutch? There are different schools of though on whether or not the languages you mentioned are actually descended from the Old Saxon found in the Heliand.

    • @arjanboes2024
      @arjanboes2024 Před 2 lety +1

      @@scottt.shellcontinentalger2464 My Grandmother and Grandfather are from that region. A lot of my ancestors were. They all spoke Neder Saksisch (that's the official name here.) nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nedersaksisch

  • @Seyone030
    @Seyone030 Před 17 dny

    Again Dagobert is probably the modern dagbert.

  • @ingwiafraujaz3126
    @ingwiafraujaz3126 Před 2 lety +1

    I assume OS 'mōd' is cognate with Modern Dutch 'moed', meaning "courage".

    • @scottt.shellcontinentalger2464
      @scottt.shellcontinentalger2464  Před 2 lety +2

      Correct

    • @ingwiafraujaz3126
      @ingwiafraujaz3126 Před 2 lety +1

      @@scottt.shellcontinentalger2464 Love to see how visibly closely connected related modern languages like Dutch and Frisian are to Old Saxon (besides just Low Saxon).