Commentary on this letter will be due on September 30. Please post your commentary to aethel-heralds@lists.andrew.cmu.edu, or send it privately to: garnet [AT] aeheralds [DOT] net.
I apologize for the length of this letter, but I
wanted to get all the Pennsic submissions out for commentary as quickly
as possible. This letter includes almost everything that I have in hand
as of this date. The sole exception is a device submission for Rauri
Macallan of Hunter's Home. I am unable to locate any indication that he
has registered his name, so I will be contacting him.
It is the intent of the Æthelmearc College of Heralds that the following items be considered for registration. Unless otherwise noted, submitters will accept any changes.
1.
Aleksander Regulanka - New name, New device
Per bend sable and argent, a decresent and a hound dormant counterchanged.
The name is intended to be masculine. The submitter will accept minor changes only. The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Aleksander - website: Speer and Mittleman, "Polish Given Names in Nazwiska Polakolw" at http://s-gabriel.org/names/walraven/polish/
Regulanka - Istvan, Blue Tyger, attests to this and will provide documentation. No additional documentation cited. Can the college assist with documentation?
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
2.
Alide van Spaarnwoude - New name, New device
Azure, a castle and on a chief rayonny argent three elm trees couped vert.
No intended gender is given. The submitter will accept any changes, and requests authenticity for 14th-15th century Holland.
Alide - website: Friedemann, "Dutch names 1393-96" at http://www.ellipsis.cx/~liana/names/dutch/dutch14.html s.n. Aleid
van - website: Toddekyn, "Flemish Names from Bruges, 1400-1600" http://www.s-gabriel.org/docs/bruges/index.html shows "van <Placename>" as a frequent byname construction.
Spaarnwoude - Spaarnwoude, Sparnwoude, Sparwoude: found in a family geneology as the name of a river near Haarlem in the Natherlands. As no Dutch placename references were available at Pennsic, the consulting herald requests that the college document this name element as needed.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
3.
Ambrose Kyrielle - New name, New device
Per chevron purpure and Or, a chevron rompu counterchanged.
The name is intended to be male. The submitter will accept any changes and cares most about English or French language/culture. The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Ambrose - Withycombe, s.n. Ambrose. Header form. Dated in this spelling to c. 1440. The submitter would prefer the spelling <Ambros> if the college can provide documentation for it.
Kyrielle
- Reaney & Wilson, s.n. Kerrell.
<John
Kyrrell>, 1583
<Bertram
de Criel> & <de Crioille>, 1221
<Kyrielle>
is presented as a reasonable interpolation.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
4.
Antonius Hasebroek - New name, New device
Per pale purpure and Or, a pair of jointed trews vairy potent azure and argent.
The name is intended to be male. The submitter will accept minor changes only and cares most about sound. The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Antonius - website: Toddekyn, "Flemish Given Names from Bruges, 1400-1600" at http://www.s-gabriel.org/docs/bruges/given-list.html dates this spelling to 1400-1550.
Hasebroek - website: Toddekyn, "Flemish Bynames from Bruges, 1400-1600: D-K" at http://www.s-gabriel.org/docs/bruges/byname-list2.html dates this spelling to 1593.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
5.
Arianwen verch Rhys ap Gwalter - New name, New device
Azure, a pine tree and on a chief argent three arrows point to chief azure.
The
name is intended to be feminine. The submitter accepts any changes and
cares most about the language/culture.
verch - daughter of
Rhys - Tangwystyl verch Morgant Glasvryn, "A Simple Guide to Constructing 13th Century Welsh Names" (WWW: J. Mittleman, 1996) [URL: http://www.s-gabriel.org/names/tangwystyl/welsh13.html].
ap - son of
Gwalter - Talan Gynek, "Late Sixteenth Century Welsh Names" (WWW: Brian M. Scott, 1994) [URL: http://www.sca.org/heraldry/laurel/names/talanWelsh/6.htm]
Herald of Record:
6. Bj{o,}rn Einarsson - New name, New device
Gules, a squirrel per fess Or and azure.
The name is intended to be male. The submitter will accept minor changes only and cares most about the meaning "Bjorn, son of Einarsson". The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Bj{o,}rn - Geirr Bassi, p. 8, attests to 42 occurrences in the Landnámabók
Einarsson - Geirr Bassi, p. 9, attests to 28 occurrences of <Einarr> in the Landnámabók. <-rr> becomes <-rs> in the genitive, giving <Einars>+<son>.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
7. Celine Violier - New name
The name is intended to be female. The submitter will accept minor changes only and cares most about meaning. The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Celine - Morlet, Dictionnaire Étymologique des Noms de Famille, header form. Two saints by this name, one a friend of Ste. Genevieve (6th century), the other the mother of a bishop of Soissons.
Violier - Morlet, op. cit., s.n. Viola. Occitan byname for a stringed instrument player.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
8.
Corbinus of Æthelmearc - New name, New device
Per saltire vert and argent, in fess two ravens close respectant sable.
No intended gender is given. The submitter will accept any changes. The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Corbinus - Morlet, Latin, s.n. Corbinus dated to 780 in Cart. S. Vict. Mars.
Æthelmearc - SCA kingdom name registered September 1989
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
9. Deianeira Carmen
Rodriguez y Aragonés - New name, New device
Purpure, on a chevron argent between two bull's heads erased contourney and a straight-rayed demi-sun issuant from base Or three crosses flory sable.
This name is intended to be feminine. The submitter requests authenticity for late 15th Century Spain. The submitter will accept any changes and cares most about the sound. Of the four names lists, the submitter notes that the most important element for her is Deianeira..
I checked the House of Names links. May I ask that any member of the
College with knowledge of Spanish names supply further documentation?
Deianeira - the Beazley
Archive [http://www.beazley.ox.ac.uk/CGPrograms/Dict/ASP/OpenDictionary.asp?name=Deianeira.html]
shows Deianeira (human wife of Herakles) detailed on a Athenian
red-figure clay was dating about 475-425 BC. - http://www.bartleby.com/65/he/HerculesGk.html
details the marriage of Deianeira and Herakles.
Additionally, in both the Grecian and Iberian cultures compound
names are common. Dei (Theophoric) and Aneira cited from (Heini
Gruffudd Welsh Personal Names, p. 9).
The submitter also included these links:
http://www.lgpn.ox.ac.uk/names/practices.html
Lexicon of Personal Names
http://www.cedarseed.com/air/celticnames.html
Names of Celtic, Gaelic, Welsh, Cornish origins
http://pup.princeton.edu/books/lyons/chapter_2.html
[¶22.] and [¶55.] respectively
http://www.cubagenweb.org/names.htm
Compound surnames / Honorifics / Middle names
Rodriguez - Names from
registries of the second half of the 15th century, in the Historical
Archive of the Province of Cordoba [http://www.historiaviva.org/nombres/nombres_cordob15-ing.shtml]
Rodriguez - http://www.houseofnames.com/xq/asp/sId./kbId.316/title.Sample+History:+Rodriguez/qx/knowledgebase.htm
- Cites that the name Rodriquez has been traced to its source in
Castile, where the name originated in Visigothic times. Variations
include: Rodriguez, Rodriz, Rodríguiz, Rodriguiz, Rodrigo,
Roderiz, Ruderiz, Roiz. The Rodriguez family originated in Old Castile,
where the Visigothic nobles became established. One of the first
records of the name is from the ninth century, making it one of the
oldest documented Castilian surnames.
Aragones - http://www.houseofnames.com/xq/asp/sId./kbId.18/qx/knowledgebase.htm
- Spelling variations include: Aragón, Aragon, de Aragón,
de Aragon, Arogonés and many more. First found in Aragon, in
northeastern Spain. Some of the first settlers of this name or some of
its variants were: Early migrants to the New World bearing this surname
were: Diego de Aragón, who sailed to America in 1528 with his
brother Pedro: Francisco de Aragón sailed to America in 1513.
Herald
of Record: Taranach
10. Drogomir Von Litwin - New name
The name is intended to be male. The submitter will accept minor changes only and cares most about 13th century Polish language/culture. The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Drogomir - website: Magistra Nicolaa de Bracton of Leicester, "Early Germanic Names from Primary Sources" at http://members.tripod.com/nicolaa5/articles/german.html dates <Drogo> to 5th-9th century in Penguin Classics Two Lives of Charlemagne.
Searle, Onomasticon Anglo-Saxonicum, s.n. Drogo, dated to 367.
Litwin - Bahlow, Dictionary of German Names, s.n. Littwin. The Polish word is <Littauer>, meaning "Lithuanian". Undated.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
11.
Eoin
of Argyll - New name, New device
Per pall Or, sable and purpure, a chief vert.
The name is intended to be male. The submitter will accept minor changes only and cares most about the sound "O-wen of AR-guy-ell". The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Eoin - OCM, p. 58, header form.
Argyll - Johnston, p. 87, s.n. Argyle. Former spelling is dated prior to end of grey period; latter spelling dated to 1425.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
10.
Eudoxia Antonina - New name, New device
Or, an apple tree gules fructed Or, on a chief gules a crescent between two roundels all Or.
The name is intended to be female. The submitter will accept any changes and requests authenticity for 6th - 7th century Byzantine.
Eudoxia - website: Chavez, "Common Names of the Aristocracy in the Roman Empire During the 6th and 7th Centuries" at http://www.sca.org/heraldry/laurel/names/byzantine/early_byz_names.html lists <Eudocia>, and the male form <Eudoxius>.
Antonina - website: Chavez, op. cit., lists <Antonius>. The client would like the patronymic form of Antonius
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
13.
Failenn de Céarsaigh - New device
Per pale azure and argent, a vol counterchanged.
The name was registered in May 2002. Her old device, Counterermine, a nude winged woman statant affronty wings displayed argent crined azure within a bordure argent (registered November 2002), will be released when this device is accepted.
Herald
of Record: Roanna d'Evreux
14.
Finn Folhare - New badge
(fieldless) A brown onager rampant proper within and conjoined to a joscelyn wreathed gules and ermine belled Or.
The name was registered in April 2003 via Æthelmearc. There is one device and one badge currently associated with this name
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
15. Gabrán Glas - New name
The name is intended to be male. The submitter will accept minor changes only and cares most about spelling. The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Gabrán - website: "Identity of Arthur" at http://www.templum.freeserve.co.uk/history/strathclyde/realarthur.htm. <Gabran> is given as the name of a king who took his throne in 537-540 AD, per the Annals of Tigernach and other annals.
Black, p. 214, s.n. Domangart, says "Domingartus or Domangartus, son of Aidan mac Gabhran" was slain in a battle dated to 598.
Glas - Gaelic descriptive byname meaning "grey". Dictionary of the Irish Language s.n. Glas, lists this word and many examples of the word appearing in early texts.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
16. Gabriela Von Litwin - New name
The name is intended to be female. The submitter will accept minor changes only and cares most about 13th century Polish language/culture. The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Gabriela - website: Speer and Mittleman, "Polish Given Names in Nazwiska Polakolw" at http://s-gabriel.org/names/ walraven/polish/ s.n. masculine names gives <Gabriel> and <Gabryjel>
Wickendon, Dictionary of Period Russian Names s.n. Gabriel, given as a variant of the masculine name <Gavriil>. S.n. Gavriil, <Gavriil Bozhin> is dated to 1500; <Gavrila Baishin> is dated to 1445, all masculine.
Website: Scott, "Medieval German Given Names from Silesia" s.n. Gabriel gives one occurrence in 1365 and two occurrences in 1422.
Litwin - Bahlow, Dictionary of German Names, s.n. Littwin. The Polish word is <Littauer>, meaning "Lithuanian". Undated.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
17.
Gillian Llywelyn - New badge
Per pale vert and argent, a stag's head cabossed and in chief a mullet sable.
The name was registered in September 1996 via East. There is one device currently associated with this name.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
18.
Grania filia Briani - New name, New device
Per fess vert and sable, a winged boar statant argent and a lymphad Or.
The name is intended to be female. The submitter will accept minor changes only and cares most about the meaning "Grania daughter of Brianus," specifying the she "just wants Grania". The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Grania - OCM, p. 114, s.n. Gráinne: Irish myth, retained its popularity (for real people) through late Middle Ages. Famous Gráinne (Grace O Malley)
Woulfe, Sloinnte Gaideal irGall, p. 211, s.n. Gráinne, gives Latin form as <Grania>.
Withycombe, 3rd ed., p. 138, s.n. Grainne, Grania: header spelling.
filia - Latin meaning "daughter"
Briani - OCM, p. 35, s.n. Brian: popular since Brian Bora's 1014 victory.
Woulfe, p. 113, s.n. Brian, gives Latin as Brianus.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
19.
Isabella FitzRandolph
- New device
Per pale vert and ermine argent with sable, a trefoil per pale argent and sable.
Her name was registered in July 2004.
Herald
of Record: Cadell Blaidd du
20. Isabella FitzRandolph
- New badge
(Fieldless) a trefoil per pale vert and ermine argent with sable.
Her name was registered in July 2004.
Herald
of Record: Cadell Blaidd du
21. Juliana de Duglas - New name
The name is intended to be female. The submitter will accept any changes and cares most about sound. The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Juliana - Withycombe, p. 184, s.n. Juliana, dated to 1196-1220; 1273
de Duglas - Black, p. 218, s.n. Douglas, says "William de Duglas, the first of the family in record, between 1175 and 1199..."
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
22. Katerine Chamberlyne - New name
The name is intended to be female. The submitter will accept minor changes only and cares most about sound. The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Katerine - website: Scott, "Feminine Given Names in A Dictionary of English Surnames", s.n. Katharine at http://www.s-gabriel.org/names/talan/reaney/reaney.cgi?Katharine dates this spelling to 1437, 1450 and 1502
Chamberlyne - website: O'Brien, "Name Distribution in King's Stanley Marriages: 1573-1600", at http://www.s-gabriel.org/names/mari/kingsstanley/SurnamesAlpha.html, s.n. Chamberlyn, dates <Chamberlyne> to 1577
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
23.
Katrina of York - New name, New device
Per fess wavy Or and purpure, two dragons sejant counterchanged.
The name is intended to be female. The submitter will accept minor changes only and cares most about sound and English language/culture. She specifically requests that Katrina not be changed to Katerina. The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Katrina - Withycombe, s.n. Katharine, dates <Katerine> to 15th century and <Katerina> to 1428.
website: Scott, "Feminine Given Names in A Dictionary of English Surnames", s.n. Katharine at http://www.s-gabriel.org/names/talan/reaney/reaney.cgi?Katharine dates <Kateryn> to 1456, <Kateryne> to 1524, and <Kateryna> to 1296
website: Friedemann, "16th Century Gloucestershire Names" at http://www.ellipsis.cx/~liana/names/late16.html lists both <Katheryn> and <Katryne>
Based on the above, the shift of <-y-> to <-i-> and of <-e> to <-a> is proposed as a reasonable extrapolation from <Katryne>, yielding <Katrina>.
York - Reaney & Wilson, s.n. York, dates <John de York> to 1324 and <Thomas York> to 1522.
N.B.: If there is a mundane conflict (consulting herald at Pennsic could not check), the submitter will allow the addition of the byname <Wulfricson>, as documented in the submission for Ulric Wulfricson below.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
24.
Kieran Ursel - New name, New device
Vert, a bear rampant argent collared sable between three bezants.
The name is intended to be male. The submitter will accept minor changes only and cares most about the meaning of Ursel as "bear." The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Kieran - OCM, s.n. Ciaran: "according to early Irish sources, there were some 6 saints of the name...generally anglicized Kieran."
Ursel - Reaney & Wilson, s.n. Ursell gives <William Ursel> dated 1163
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
25.
Lodowick of Greys Inn - New badge
(fieldless) A spidersweb purpure.
The name was registered in August 1995 via East. There is one badge currently associated with this name.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
26.
Luceta di Cosimo - New name, New device
Sable, a raremouse between three fleaurs-de-lys one and two Or.
No intended gender is given. The submitter will accept any changes. The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Luceta - De Felice, Dizionario dei Nomi Italiani, p. 240, s.n. Lucia gives <Lucetta>. Submitter prefers one t, not two, yielding <Luceta>.
Cosimo - De Felice, Dizionario dei Cognomi Italiani, p. 108, s.n. Cosma.
Fucilla, Joseph, Our Italian Surnames, p. 20, describes this as a Greek and Roman name.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
27.
Mendel Wisebegere - New name, New device
Per chevron vert semy of cogwheels Or and argent, two open books argent and a right triangle voided vert .
The name submission form is absent from the submissions packet. According to the Pennsic Name Worksheet, the submitter will accept any changes and requests authenticity for the surname only for 1350-1450-ish Moravia or Bavaria.
Mendel - Bahlow-Gentry, p. 326, s.n. Mendel, dates <Mendel> to 1414, 1365 and 1381 as a masculine given name in Moravia, Brünn and Linz, respectively.
Wisebegere - website: Scott, "Some Early Middle High German Bynames with Emphasis on Names from the Bavarian Dialect Area" at http://www.s-gabriel.org/ names/talan/Early_German_Bynames.html dates this spelling to 1250
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
28. Mendel Wisebegere - Household name: Schmiedekamp Haus
The name submission form is absent from the submissions packet. According to the Pennsic Name Worksheet, the submitter will accept any changes and cares most about sound. The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Schmiedekamp - Bahlow-Gentry, s.n. Schmiedekampf: a placename ('smith-field') in Westphalia, used here as a surname to designate a family (a [semi-]organized group of people as required for households in the RfS). Note that <Schmiedekamp> is the submitter's legal surname.
Haus - German for "house". Seems to have the same family of extended meanings as the English for use as a household designator.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
29. Míchéal Dúin Gharbhaín Ó Murchadha - New name
The name is intended to be male. The submitter will accept any changes and cares most about Irish Gaelic language/culture. The submitter requests authenticity for 16th century Southern Irish.
Míchéal - OCM, p. 136, s.n. Míchél, gives <Míchéal> as the post-1200 form.
Dúin Gharbhaín - Room, p. 51, s.n. Dungarven gives <Dún Garbhaín>. The genitive form is <Dúin Gharbhaín>, with the second element lenited.
Ó Murchadha - Woulfe, p. 194, s.n. Ó Murchadha gives this as the genitive. Undated.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
30. Minamoto no Taikawa Saiaiko - New name
This name is intended to be feminine. The submitter requests
authenticity for 12th Century Japan and for Japanese language, but the
submitter will accept no changes. She cares most about the meaning of
the name, Saiaiko, which she believes to mean "beloved child".
The included documentation is as cited forthwith:
Minamoto
- http://www.sengokudaimyo.com/miscellany/names.html
A table on the Web page is titled: "Some surnames of families active
prior to 1600:" and includes the name Minamoto.
The vast majority of surnames consist of two kanji; a few names use three or more, and there is a handful of one kanji names as well. Some of the latter - though by no means all, as such native Japanese names as Katsura, Minamoto, and Kusunoki show - point to possible Chinese or Korean ancestry, where single-kanji surnames are the rule.
Ex:
Minamoto
Reference: Barbara Nostrand's Name Construction in Medieval Japan.
The College of Arms has in the past
discouraged the use of historically significant surnames such as
Fujiwara, Minamoto, Taira, Hojo, Ashikaga, and Tokugawa. These names
were used by many people and probably should be admissible for use in
the Society for Creative Anachronism. Only Yamato and Toyotomi should
be reserved surnames.
As well, within th eera that contains The
Gempei Wars (1181-85 AD), the Heian Jidai and in the Kamakura Jidai,
one could take the clan name, Minamoto, in return for swearing fealty
to a daimyo of the clan. This surname does not fall under the
restrictions of Presumptuous Names.
Taikawa - Reference: Barbara Nostrand's Name Construction in Medieval Japan.
Using the place-name construction chart
in Barbara Nostrand's Name
Construction in Medieval Japan, I have constructed the name
Taikawa using the prefix Tai, meaning "big", and -kawa, meaning
"river." Minamoto no Taikawa (http://www.sengokudaimyo.com/miscellany/names.html)
During the Heian and early Kamakura
periods, the names of the aristocracy would be rendered as "Surname no
Given name". The "no" is analogous to the German "von" or the French
"de" (yes, and the English "of"). Literally, the name Minamoto no
Yoritomo is "Yoritomo of the Minamoto". Ex: Minamoto (clan name) no
Taikawa (given name).
Saiaiko - http://www.sengokudaimyo.com/miscellany/names.html
Most of the "names" of women known in
early Japan are not the actual names of the women in question. Sei
Shônagon, for example, the author of Makura no Sôshi (The Pillow Book) and other
writings, is known by the Chinese pronounciation of the first kanji in
her family's name (Kiyowara) and a court-title sobriquet. Likewise, the
true name of Murasaki Shikibu, author of the Tale of Genji, is unknown. The
latter seems to have been called Tô no Shikibu in earlier
sources; the "Tô" is the first character from the name
"Fujiwara", into a cadet branch of which she had been born; the
"Shikibu" comes from the title of an office held by her father and
brother; the "Murasaki" was a nickname given her owing to the lead
female character in her book, Genji
Monogalari (The Tale of the
Genji).
A table on this page titled: "Common
elements in women's names" includes the suffic -ko/-shi, meaning
"child."
Ex: Saiai (beloved) -ko (child)
Herald
of Record: Magariki Katsuichi no Koredono
31. Pádraig an Fhasaigh - New name, New device
Quarterly Or and gules, on a chief sable three harps Or.
The name is intended to be male. The submitter will accept minor changes only, but specifically allows change to <Padraig Bharain> or <Padraig Ó Murnain>. The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Pádraig - OCM, p. 152, s.n. Pátraic. Undated.
Website: O'Brien, "Index of Names in Irish Annals", s.n. Padraig at http://www.s-gabriel.org/names/mari/AnnalsIndex/Masculine/Padraig.html gives this as the nominative standard Early Modern Irish Gaelic form (c1200-c1700).
an Fhasaigh - Website: O'Brien, "Index of Names in Irish Annals", s.n. an Fhasaigh at http://www.s-gabriel.org/names/mari/AnnalsIndex/DescriptiveBynames/anFhasaigh.shtml gives this as the genitive standard Early Modern Irish Gaelic form (c1200-c1700) meaning "[of] the wilderness".
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
Gules, on a cross Or a mullet gules, on a chief indented Or two dragons passant respectant gules.
The name was registered in March 2004 via Æthelmearc. There is no device or badge currently associated with this name.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
Gules, a dexter tierce Or.
The name was registered in March 2004 via Æthelmearc. There is no device or badge currently associated with this name, but a device submission accompanies this item (see above).
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
34. Poe
Silvertop - New name, New device
Per chevron azure and sable, a rapier inverted argent and overall an apple Or.
The name is intended to be male. The submitter will accept minor changes only and cares most about sound. The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Poe - Reaney & Wilson, s.n. Paw. Describes <Poe> as from Old Norse <Pá>, Middle English <Po> 'peacock', used both as a personal-name and as a nickname. <Pavo Cocus> is dated to 1203; <Robert son of Pawe> to 1277.
Silvertop - Jönsjö, Jan, Middle English Nicknames, vol. I Compounds, p. 161, s.n. Silvertop, dates <Ric. Silvertop> to 1388.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
35.
Rayne le Fey - New name, New device
Purpure, a cat couchant gardant contourney, a chief indented argent.
The name is intended to be female. The submitter will accept minor changes only and cares most about sound. The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Rayne - Reaney & Wilson, s.n. Rain dates <Richard Rayneson> to 1379 and says, "Fr Reine, Lat Regina 'queen', a personal-name found in France; also a nickname, here derogatory."
le Fey - Reaney & Wilson, s.n. Fay dates <Margaret le Fey> to 1332; from Old French fae 'fairy'
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
36.
Reinhardt Holtgreve - New name, New device
Argent, a chevron inverted vert and in chief a pine tree eradicated proper.
The name is intended to be male. The submitter will accept minor changes only and cares most about the meaning "forest ranger." The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Reinhardt - Bahlow, Deutches Namenlexicon, s.n. Reinhard(t). Gentry's translation states "popular personal name in the Middle Ages," though no dated citations are given.
Holtgreve - Bahlow, Deutches Namenlexicon, s.n. Holtgrewe, cites <Bruno Holtgreve> 1351.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
37. Sabrina Godolphin - New name, New
device
Azure a unicorn rampant, in chief five pointed croses Or.
The name is intended to be feminine. The submitter requests authenticity for 13th Century Britain, but will accept no changes and cares most about the language/culture.
There was no
documentation submitted for this name. Can the college assist with
documentation?
Herald
of Record: none
38. Safiye bint Kara Sun'üllah - New name
The name is intended to be female. The submitter will accept any changes and requests authenticity for 16th century Turkish language/culture.
Safiye - website: Witcher, "16th Century Turkish Names" at http://www.s-gabriel.org/names/ursula/ottoman/ s.n. Women's Names, lists <Safiye> as a Muslim name.
Kara - Op. Cit., s.n. Titles and Bynames, gives <Kara> meaning "black, unlucky, gloomy" and gives as an example <Kara Mustafa>
Sun'üllah - Op. Cit., s.n. Men's Names, gives <Sun'üllah> as a Muslim name.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
39.
Shea Rose O'Donnell - New name, New device
Purpure a rose argent with leaves vert.
This name is intended to be feminine. The submitter requests authenticity for 13th Century Irish, but will not accept changes and cares most about the language/culture.
There was no documentation submitted for this name. Can the college assist with documentation?
Herald
of Record: none
Per chevron Gules and Argent, in pale a riding bit Or and an eagle Sable.
The name was registered in December 1996 via Atenveldt. There is one badge currently associated with this name.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
41. Skalla-Valgarðr Gunnarsson - New badge
Purpure, on a pile argent a raven Volant wings displayed bendwise sinister sable.
The name was registered in April 2001 via Æthelmearc. There is one device currently associated with this name.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
42.
Skjaldv{o,}r Vikarsdöttir - New name, New device
Per saltire sable and vert, an opicus segreant contourney within a bordure argent.
The name is intended to be female. The submitter will accept minor changes only, cares most about language/culture and requests authenticity for early period Norse.
Skjaldv{o,}r - Geirr Bassi, p. 14, cites this as a feminine name from the Heimskringla.
Vikarsdöttir - Geirr Bassi, p. 16, gives <Vikarr> as a masculine name from the Íslendingasogur. <-rr> becomes <-rs> in the genitive, giving <Vikars>.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
43. Sorcha inghean Airt - New name, New device
Vert, on a lozenge argent, a butterfly displayed azure.
The name is intended to be female. The submitter will accept any changes, cares most about language/culture and requests authenticity for post-1200 Gaelic culture.
Sorcha -
Withycombe; also O'Corrain and Maguire - header, p. 167
inghean - proper Gaelic term for "daughter of" - see http://www.medievalscotland.org/scotnames/quickgaelicbynames#simplepatronymicbyname.
Airt - proper form of patronymic - Arte; see http://www.s-gabriel.org/names/tangwystyl/irish100/.
Herald
of Record: Matilda Bosvyle
44. Thomas Lestrange - New device
Gules, on a chevron between three estoiles Or three lozenges sable.
His name was registered in April 2004.
Herald of Record: Roana d'Evreux.
45. Þorfinna hrogn Jósepsdottir - New name
The name is intended to be female. The submitter will accept minor changes only and cares most about sound. The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Þorfinna - Geirr Bassi, p. 16, cites this as a feminine name with one occurrence in the Landnámabók
hrogn - Geirr Bassi, p. 23, meaning 'roe, spawn'. Two occurrences in the Landnámabók.
Jósepsdottir - Geirr Bassi, p. 12, gives <Jósep> as a masculine name of Christian origin.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
46.
Tommasa Isolana - New name, New device
Purpure, a bird of paradise displayed Or, on a chief argent a broadsword fesswise sable.
The name is intended to be female. The submitter will accept any changes and cares most about the meaning "islander/of the island". The submitter is not requesting authenticity for, but is interested in Italian language of any time period.
Tomassa - De Felice, Dizionario dei Nomi Italiani, p. 344, s.n. Tommaso
Website: Mittleman, "Feminine Given Names from the Online Catasto of Florence of 1427" cites 19 occurances of <Tomassa>
Isolana - Langenscheidt Standard Italian Dictionary, p. 171 s.n. islander, gives <isolano>. <Isolana> is the presumed feminine form.
De Felice, Dizionario dei Cognomi Italiani, p. 147, s.n. Isola gives "derivati: Isolani" <-i> should be the masculine plural, with <-a> the presumed feminine singular.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
47.
Ulric Wulfricson - New name, New device
Sable, a drakkar Or sailed argent within a snake involved in annulo Or.
The name is intended to be male. The submitter will accept minor changes only and cares most about sound. The submitter specifically requests that no letters be added to the end of <Ulric>. The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Ulric - Searle, s.n. Ulfric
Wulfricson - constructed byname.
<Wulfric>: numerous headers in Searle with dates including 956, 901, 1044-1061, and 890. Reaney & Wilson, s.n. Woolrich gives <William Wulfric> in 1212.
<-son>: Reaney & Wilson, s.n. Williamson, dates <Arnold Williamssone> to 1360; s.n. Stephenson, dates <Adam Stevenson> to 1327
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
48. Una
of Rabenwald - New name, New device
Per bend gules and sable, a dragon passant and an anvil argent.
No intended gender is given. The submitter will accept any changes, according to the check boxes. However, while the submitter specifically allows for changes in spelling of <Una>, she allows no changes to <Rabenwald>. The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Una - Withycombe, s.n. Una: "sometimes used in England after Una in Spencer's Faerie Queene"
Rabenwald - constructed byname.
<Raben->: Bahlow, s.n. Rabenstein gives <Hensel Rabenstein> dated to 1381.
<-wald>: Bahlow, s.n. Vogel, gives <Walther von der Vogelweide>, attesting to the <bird>+<geographic feature> construction of a placename.
Bahlow: s.n. Grunewald, gives <Hinrich Grunewalt> 1322; s.n. Hauswald, gives <Hannos Huswald> 1413
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
49.
Vladimir Mechnik - New name, New device
Sable, two natural panthers combatant and on a point pointed argent a rose sable slipped and leaved vert.
The name is intended to be male. The submitter will accept any changes and cares most about the meaning "Vladimir the swordsman" and sound. The submitter is not requesting authenticity.
Vladimir - Wickenden, A DIctionary of Period Russian Names (3rd ed.), s.n. Vladimir. Header spelling dated to 1053, many other uses as late as 1605 (that one spelled <Wlodimir>).
Mechnik - Wickenden, A DIctionary of Period Russian Names (3rd ed.), s.n. Mechnik: byname meaning 'warrior, swordsman' dated 1614 in this header spelling.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
50.
Wentlian Bekelert - New device
Per pale sable and azure, a crescent and a chief invected Or.
The name was registered in March 2004 via Æthelmearc. There is no device or badge currently associated with this name.
Herald
of Record: Pennsic
51. Yorimasa Yamahara - New name, New device
Gules, a kanji argent.
This name is intended to be masculine. The submitter requests authenticity for 16th Century Japanese language/culture. He will accept any changes and cares most about the meaning of the name. He says that it means "calm path - mountain field".
There was no documentation submitted for this name. Can the college assist with documentation? Also, can anyone offer information on the device?
Herald
of Record: Khodoska Mordosova