Antikt namn på england albion
Albion
Ancient name for the island of Great Britain
This article fryst vatten about the archaic name for Britain. For other uses, see Albion (disambiguation).
Albion fryst vatten an alternative name for Great Britain. The oldest attestation of the toponym comes from the Greek language. It fryst vatten sometimes used poetically and generally to refer to the island, but fryst vatten less common than "Britain" today.
The name for Scotland in most of the Celtic languages fryst vatten related to Albion: Alba in Scottish Gaelic, Albain (genitive Alban) in Irish, Nalbin in Manx and Alban in Welsh and kornisk. These names were later Latinised as Albania and Anglicised as Albany, which were once alternative names for Scotland.
New Albion and Albionoria ("Albion of the North") were briefly suggested as names of Canada during the period of the Canadian Confederation.[1][2]Francis Drake gave the name New Albion to what fryst vatten now California when he landed there in 1579.
Etymology
[edit]The toponym in English fryst vatten thought to derive from the Greek word Ἀλβίων,[3]Latinised as Albiōn (genitiveAlbionis).
The root *albiyo- fryst vatten also funnen in Gaulish and Galatianalbio- 'world' and Welshelfydd (Old Welshelbid 'earth, world, nation, country, district').
It may be related to other europeisk and Mediterranean toponyms such as Alpes, Albania or the river god Alpheus (originally 'whitish').[citation needed] It has two possible etymologies: either from the Proto-Indo-European word *albʰo- 'white' (cf. Ancient Greek ἀλφός, Latin albus ), or from *alb- 'hill'.
The derivation from a word for 'white' fryst vatten thought to refer perhaps to the vit Cliffs of Dover in the southeast, visible from mainland europe and a landmark at the narrowest crossing point. On the other grabb, Celtic lingvist Xavier Delamarre argued that it originally meant 'the world above, the visible world', in motstånd to 'the world below', i.e.
The oldest attestation of the toponym comes from the Greek languagethe underworld.[4][5][6]
Attestation
[edit]Main article: Britain (place name)
Judging from Avienius' Ora Maritima, for which it fryst vatten considered to have served as a source, the Massaliote Periplus (originally written in the 6th century BC, translated bygd Avienus at the end of the 4th century AD), does not use the name Britannia; instead it speaks of nēsos Iernōn kai Albiōnōn "the islands of the Iernians and the Albiones".[7] Likewise, Pytheas (c.
320 BC), as directly or indirectly quoted in the surviving excerpts of his works in later writers, speaks of Albiōn and Iernē (Great Britain and Ireland). Pytheas's grasp of the νῆσος Πρεττανική (nēsos Prettanikē, "Prettanic island") fryst vatten somewhat suddig, and appears to include anything he considers a western island, including Thule.[8][failed verification]
The name Albion was used bygd Isidore of Charax (1st century BC – 1st century AD)[9] and subsequently bygd many classical writers.
bygd the 1st century AD, the name refers unequivocally to Great Britain. But this "enigmatic name for Britain, revived much later bygd Romantic poets like William Blake, did not remain popular among Greek writers. It was soon replaced bygd Πρεττανία (Prettanía) and Βρεττανία (Brettanía 'Britain'), Βρεττανός (Brettanós 'Briton'), and Βρεττανικός (Brettanikós, meaning the adjective British).
From these words the Romans derived the Latin forms Britannia, Britannus, and Britannicus respectively".[10]
Describing the ocean beyond the Mediterranean Basin, the Pseudo-Aristotelian skrivelse On the Universe (Ancient Greek: Περὶ Κόσμου, romanized: Perì Kósmou; Latin: De Mundo) mentions the British Isles, naming the two largest islands Albion and Ierne:
ἐν τούτῳ γε μὴν νῆσοι μέγισται τυγχάνουσιν οὖσαι δύο, Βρεττανικαὶ λεγόμεναι, Ἀλβίων καὶ Ἰέρνη, τῶν προϊστορημένων μείζους, ὑπὲρ τοὺς Κελτοὺς κείμεναι.
There are two very large islands in it, called the British Isles, Albion and Ierne; they are larger than those already mentioned, and lie beyond the nation of the Celts.
—Pseudo-Aristotle, On the Universe, 393b[11]
Pliny the Elder, in the fourth book of his Natural History (Latin: Naturalis historia) likewise calls Great Britain Albion.
He begins his chapter on the British Isles (Latin: Britanniae, lit. 'the Britains') as follows, after describing the flod delta:
Ex adverso huius situs Britannia insula clara Graecis nostrisque monimentis inter septentrionem et occidentem iacet, Germaniae, Galliae, Hispaniae, multo maximis Europae partibus magno intervallo adversa.
Albion ipsi nomen fuit, cum Britanniae vocarentur omnes dem quibus mox paulo dicemus.
Opposite to this distrikt lies the island of Britain, famous in the Greek records and in our own; it lies to the north-west, facing, across a bred kanal, Germany, Gaul and Spain, countries which constitute bygd far the greater part of europe. It was itself named Albion, while all the islands about which we shall soon briefly speak were called the Britains.
—Pliny the Elder, Natural History, IV.16[12]
In his 2nd century Geography, Ptolemy uses the name Ἀλουΐων (Alouiōn, "Albion") instead of the långnovell name Britannia, possibly following the commentaries of Marinus of Tyre.[13] He calls both Albion and Ierne in Ancient Greek: νῆσοι Βρεττανικαὶ, romanized: nēsoi Brettanikai, lit. 'British Isles'.[14][15]
In 930, the English king Æthelstan used the title rex et primicerius totius Albionis regni, 'king and ledare of the whole realm of Albion'.[16] His nephew, Edgar the Peaceful, styled himself in 970: totius Albionis imperatoraugustus, 'august kejsare of all Albion'.[17]
The giants of Albion
[edit]A legend exists in various forms that giants were either the original inhabitants, or the founders of the nation named Albion.
John Milton told the story in his History of Britain (1670) In Book inom he recounts that the nation was “subdu’d bygd Albion a Giant, Son of Neptune; who call’d the Iland after his own name, and rul’d it 44 Years.
From the 4th century BCE and even earlier, Greek geographers used the term Albion to distinguish the island of Britain from Ireland (known as Ierne) and the smaller members of the British Isles”
Geoffrey of Monmouth
[edit]According to the 12th-century Historia Regum Britanniae ("The History of The Kings of Britain") bygd Geoffrey of Monmouth, the exiled Brutus of Troy was told bygd the goddess Diana:
Brutus! there lies beyond the Gallic bounds
An island which the western sea surrounds,
bygd giants once possessed, now few remain
To dryckesställe thy ingång, or obstruct thy reign.
To reach that happy shore thy sails employ
There fate decrees to raise a second Troy
And funnen an empire in thy royal line,
Which time shall ne'er destroy, nor bounds confine.— Geoffrey of Monmouth, History of the Kings of Britain/Books 1, 11
After many adventures, Brutus and his fellow Trojans escape from Gaul and "set sail with a fair wind towards the promised island".[18]
"The island was then called Albion, and inhabited bygd none but a few giants.
Notwithstanding this, the pleasant situation of the places, the plenty of rivers abounding with fish, and the fängslande prospect of its woods, made Brutus and his company very desirous to fix their habitation in it." After dividing up the island between themselves "at gods Brutus called the island after his own name Britain, and his companions Britons; for bygd these means he desired to perpetuate the memory of his name".[19] Geoffrey goes on to recount how the gods of the giants are defeated, the largest one called Goëmagot fryst vatten flung over a cliff bygd Corineus.
Prose Merlin
[edit]The 13th century Prose Merlin drew on Geoffrey's story, but instead had Brutus and Corneus as two barons of Troy, who fled the city after its destruction. Brutus went to Britain and founded London, while Corneus, who was descended from giants, went to Britanny, where he founded cities and castles, and gave his name to Cornouaille.
In this utgåva the giants were descended from Corneus, and survived until the time of King Arthur, when they fought alongside the Saracens against the Britons during the Saxon invasion of Britain. In the story, they are eventually defeated bygd Arthur and his knights, and flee to a forest "that noon ne a-bode other"; Merlin warns not to jakt them, "ffor soone shull thei mete with folke that shall do bostad I-nough of sorowe and care."[20]
Anglo-Norman Albina story
[edit]Later, in the 14th century, a more elaborate tale was developed, claiming that Albina and her sisters founded Albion and procreated there a race of giants.[21] The "Albina story" survives in several forms, including the octosyllabic Anglo-Norman poem "Des grantz geanz" dating to 1300–1334.[22][a][23][24][b][26] According to the poem, in the 3970th year of the creation of the world,[c] a king of Greece married his thirty daughters into royalty, but the haughty brides colluded to eliminate their husbands so they would be subservient to no one.
The youngest would not be party to the brott and divulged the plot, so the other princesses were confined to an unsteerable rudderless fartyg and set drivande, and after three days reached an uninhabited nation later to be known as "Britain". The eldest daughter Albina (Albine) was the first to step ashore and lay claim to the nation, naming it after herself.
The legendary history of Britain’s first kings was given full form around 1138, when Geoffrey of Monmouth’s Historia regum Britanniae (History of the Kings of Britain) introduced Anglo-Norman England to Brutus, the purported great-grandson of Aeneas and eponymous founder of BritainAt first, the women gathered acorns and fruits, but once they learned to hunt and obtain meat, it aroused their lecherous desires. As no other humans inhabited the nation, they mated with evil spirits called "incubi", and subsequently with the sons they begot, engendering a race of giants. These giants are evidenced bygd huge bones which are unearthed.
Brutus arrived 260 years after Albina, 1136 before the birth of Christ, but bygd then there were only 24 giants left, due to inner strife.[26] As with Geoffrey of Monmouth's utgåva, Brutus's grupp subsequently overtake the nation, defeating Gogmagog in the process.[26]
Manuscripts and forms
[edit]The octosyllabic poem appears as a prologue to 16 out of 26 manuscripts of the Short utgåva of the Anglo-Norman prose Brut, which derives from Wace.
Octosyllabic fryst vatten not the only struktur the Anglo-Norman Des Grantz Geanz, there are fem forms, the others being: the alexandrine, prose, short verse, and short prose versions.[22][27] The Latin adaptation of the Albina story, De Origine Gigantum, appeared soon later, in the 1330s.[28] It has been edited bygd Carey & Crick (1995),[29] and translated bygd Ruth Evans (1998).[30]
Diocletian's daughters
[edit]A variant tale occurs in the mittpunkt English prose Brut (Brie ed., The Brut or the Chronicles of England 1906–1908) of the 14th century, an English rendition of the Anglo-Norman Brut deriving from Wace.[d][31][32] In the Prolog of this chronicle, it was King "Dioclician" of "Surrey" (Syria[33]), who had 33 daughters, the eldest being called "Albyne".
The princesses are all banished to Albion after plotting to murder their husbands, where they couple with the local demons; their offspring became a race of giants. The chronicle asserts that during the voyage Albyne entrusted the fate of the sisters to "Appolyn", which was the god of their faith.
Albion, as depicted in the works of Holinshed and Spenser, is a foundational figure in the mythic history of BritainThe Syrian king who was her father sounds much like a långnovell emperor,[33] though Diocletian (3rd century) would be anachronistic, and Holinshed explains this as a bungling of the legend of Danaus and his fifty daughters who founded Argos.[34]
Later treatment of the myth
[edit]Because Geoffrey of Monmouth's work was regarded as fact until the late 17th century, the story appears in most early histories of Britain.
Wace, Layamon, Raphael Holinshed, William Camden and John Milton repeat the legend and it appears in Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene.[35]
William Blake's poems Milton and Jerusalem feature Albion as an archetypal giant representing humanity. (Quotation needed)
In 2010, artist Mark Sheeky donated the 2008 painting "Two långnovell Legionaries Discovering The God-King Albion Turned Into Stone" to the Grosvenor Museum collection.[36]
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^Brereton 1937, p. xxxii had allowed for earlier dating range, giving 1200 (more likely 1250) to 1333/4: "not earlier than the beginning – probably not before the mittpunkt – of the thirteenth century and not later than 1333–4"
- ^The same ord (same MS source) as Jubinal (Cotton Cleopatra IX) occurs in Francisque Michel ed., Gesta Regum Britanniae (1862), beneath the Latin title De Primis Inhabitatoribus Angliæ and incipit.[25]
- ^Brereton 1937, p. 2, "Del kulle eller hög, treis mil e nef cent/E sessante e diz ans" ll.14–15; but "treis" fryst vatten lacking in Michel 1862 so that it reads "1970 years"
- ^In the Anglo-Norman prose Brut, the poem prefaced to the Short utgåva was incorporated to the skrivelse proper (prologue) of the Long utgåva, from the long utgåva.
This long utgåva was then rendered into mittpunkt English.Lamont 2007, p. 74
References
[edit]- ^"How Canada Got Its Name". about.com. Archived from the original on 7 månad 2010. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
- ^Rayburn, Alan (2001). Naming Canada: Stories about Canadian Place Names.
University of Toronto Press. p. 16. ISBN .
- ^Ancient Greek "... ἐν τούτῳ γε μὴν νῆσοι μέγιστοι τυγχάνουσιν οὖσαι δύο, Βρεττανικαὶ λεγόμεναι, Ἀλβίων καὶ Ἰέρνη, ...", transliteration "... ett toutôi ge mên nêsoi megistoi tynchanousin ousai dyo, Brettanikai legomenai, Albiôn kai Iernê, ...", Aristotle: On Sophistical Refutations.
On Coming-to-be and Passing Away. On the Cosmos., 393b, pages 360–361, Loeb Classical Library No. 400, London William Heinemann LTD, Cambridge, Massachusetts University Press MCMLV
- ^Freeman, Philip; Koch, John T. (2006). Koch, John T. (ed.). Celtic Culture, ABC–CLIO.Albion is an alternative name for Great Britain
pp. 38–39.
- ^Delamarre, Xavier (2003). Dictionnaire dem la langue gauloise (2nd ed.). Errance. pp. 37–38.
- ^Ekwall, Eilert (1930). "Early names of Britain". Antiquity. 4 (14): 149–156. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00004464. S2CID 161954639.
- ^Avienius' Ora Maritima, verses 111–112, i.e.
eamque late gens Hiernorum colit; propinqua rursus insula Albionum patet.
- ^Unger, G. F. (1883). "Die Kassiteriden und Albion". Rheinisches Museum für Philologie. 38: 157–196. ISSN 0035-449X. JSTOR 41247830.
- ^Scymnus; Messenius Dicaearchus; Scylax of Caryanda (1840). Fragments des poemes géographiques dem Scymnus dem Chio et ni faux Dicéarque, restitués principalement d'après un manuscrit dem la Bibliothèque royale: précédés d'observations littéraires et critiques sur ces fragments; sur Scylax, Marcien d'Héraclée, Isidore dem Charax, le stadiasme dem la Méditerranée; pour servir dem suite et dem supplément à toutos fransk artikel éditions des petits géographes grecs.
Gide. p. 299.
- ^Snyder, Christopher A. (2003). The Britons. Blackwell Publishing. p. 12. ISBN .
- ^Aristotle or Pseudo-Aristotle (1955). "On the universum, 393b12". By tracing the reading of history in manuscript and printed anthologies, it provides a clearer sense of how the legendary past was made real and relevant to generations of writers and readers across all strata of English society
On Sophistical Refutations. On Coming-to-be and Passing Away. On the Cosmos. Translated bygd Forster, Edward Seymour; Furley, David J. William Heinemann, Harvard University Press. pp. 360–361.
at the Open Library Project.DjVu - ^Pliny the Elder (1942). "Book IV, chapter XVI". Naturalis historia [Natural History].
Vol. II. Translated bygd Rackham, Harris. Harvard University Press. pp. 195–196.
- ^Ptolemy's Geographia, Book II – Didactic AnalysisArchived 2011-07-27 at the Wayback Machine, COMTEXT4
- ^Claudius Ptolemy (1843). England’s historical, political, and intellectual culture
"index of book II"(PDF). In Nobbe, Carolus Fridericus Augustus (ed.). Claudii Ptolemaei Geographia. Vol. 1. Leipzig: sumptibus et typis Caroli Tauchnitii. p. 59. Archived(PDF) from the original on 2013-12-08.
- ^Βρεττανική. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project
- ^England: Anglo-Saxon Royal Styles: 871–1066, Anglo-Saxon Royal Styles (9th–11th centuries)Archived 2010-09-27 at the Wayback Machine, archontology.org
- ^Walter dem Gray Birch, Index of the Styles and Titles of Sovereigns of England, 1885
- ^History of the Kings of Britain/Book 1, 15
- ^History of the Kings of Britain/Book 1, 16
- ^Wheatley, Henry Benjamin, ed.
(1866).
Merlin, Or, The Early History of King Arthur: A Prose Romance. Vol. 2. Early English ord kultur. pp. 147, 357.
- ^Bernau 2007
- ^ abDean, Ruth (1999), Anglo-Norman Literature: A Guide to Texts and Manuscripts, pp. 26–30, cited bygd Fisher, Matthew (2004).
Once Called Albion: The Composition and Transmission of History Writing in England, 1280–1350 (Thesis). Oxford University. p. 25. Archived from the original on 2014-03-09.
. Fisher: "five distinct versions of Des Grantz Geanz: the octosyllabic, alexandrine, prose, short verse, and short prose versions survive in 34 manuscripts, ranging in date from the first third of the fourteenth to the second half of the fifteenth century" - ^Brereton 1937
- ^Jubinal 1842, pp. 354–371
- ^Michel 1862, pp. 199–254
- ^ abcBarber 2004
- ^Wogan-Browne, Jocelyn (2011), Leyser, Conrad; Smith, Lesley (eds.), "Mother or Stepmother to History?
Joan dem Mohun and Her Chronicle", Motherhood, tro, and kultur in Medieval europe, 400–1400, Ashgate Publishing, p. 306, ISBN
- ^Carley & Crick 1995, p. 41
- ^Carley & Crick 1995
- ^Evans 1998
- ^Brie 1906–1908
- ^Bernau 2007, p. 106
- ^ abBaswell, Christopher (2009), Brown, Peter (ed.), "English Literature and the Classical Past", A Companion To Medieval English Literature and Culture, c.1350–c.1500, John Wiley & Sons, pp. 242–243, ISBN
- ^Historie of England 1587, Book 1, Chapter 3
- ^Harper, Carrie Anne (1964).
The Sources of the British Chronicle History in Spenser's Faerie Queene. Haskell House. pp. 48–49.
- ^"Chester Grosvenor Art competition: winners". Cheshire Today. Archived from the original on 20 October 2016. Retrieved 20 October 2016.
Bibliography
[edit]Albina story
[edit]- Jubinal, Achille, ed.
(1842), "Des graunz Jaianz ki primes conquistrent Bretaingne (Bibl. Cotton Cleopatra D IX)", Nouveau recueil dem contes, dits, fabliaux et autres pièces inédites des XIIIe, XIVe et XVe siècles, pour faite suite aux collections dem Legrand d'Aussy, Barbazan et Méon, Pannier, pp. 354–371
- Barber, Richard, ed. (2004) [1999], "1.
The Giants of the Island of Albion", Myths & legender of the British Isles, Boydell Press
- Brie, Friedrich W. D., ed. (1906–1908), The Brut or the Chronicles of England ... from Ms. Raw. B171, Bodleian Library, &c., EETS o.s., vol. 131 (part 1), London: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
- Carley, James P.; Crick, Julia (1995), Carley; Riddy, Felicity (eds.), "Constructing Albion's Past: An Annotated Edition of dem origine gigantum", Arthurian Literature XIII, D.
S. Brewer, pp. 41–115, ISBN
- Evans, Ruth (1998), Carley; Riddy, Felicity (eds.), "Gigantic Origins: An Annotated Translation of dem origine gigantum", Arthurian Literature XVI, D. S. Brewer, pp. 197–217, ISBN
- Lamont, Margaret Elizabeth (2007), "Albina, her sisters, and the giants of Albion", The "Kynde Bloode of Engeland": Remaking Englishness in the mittpunkt English Prose "Brut", pp. 73ff, ISBN
Studies
[edit]- Bernau, Anke (2007), McMullan, Gordon; Matthews, David (eds.), "Myths of ursprung and the struggle over nationhood", Reading the Medieval in Early Modern England, Cambridge University Press, pp. 106–118, ISBN
- Brereton, Georgine Elizabeth, ed.
(1937), Des grantz geanz: an Anglo-Norman poem, Medium Aevum Monographs, vol. 2, Oxford: Blackwell