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[[File:Aid-Coc.gif|right|Vert, three chevronels braced inverted Or]]
'''English/Welsh'''
[[File:Skinny Holly SCA.jpg|right|300px|Vert, three chevronels braced inverted Or]]
{| class="wikitable"
|
|'''Double Given Names'''
|'''Locative'''
|'''Patronymic'''
|'''Other relationship'''
|'''Descriptive/'''


=Mistress Aidan Cocrinn=
'''Occupational'''
|'''Dictus'''
|'''Double Bynames'''
|'''Order'''
|-
|'''Old English'''
|No
|Phrase (''æt X'' or ''of'' X)
|Marked, unmarked
|
|Rare
|Yes; using ''Cognomento''
|
|given+byname
|-
|'''Middle/Early Modern'''


*''aka Mistress Aidan''
'''English'''
*Order of Precedence - http://op.calontir.org/persona/59
|Late
|All forms: Phrase (de X, of X, atte Y, de la/del Y, etc.); unmarked, adjectival,


=Persona:=
inn sign (atte Z, of the Z)
|Marked, genitive alone, unmarked
|Matronymic, many others, marked and unmarked
|Yes, may use article ''the/le'' or omit it.
|Yes; marked
|Yes; all patterns late (these are generally unmarked)
|given+byname


*10th Century Dublin Irish-Norse
given+byname+loc


given+pat+descr


=History in the SCA:=
given+byname+byname
|-
|'''Anglicized Irish'''
|No
|
|Marked, multi-generation
|Clan names
|Rare
|
|Yes
|given+byname


'''Timeline:
given+pat+pat
*Started 1983 Shire of Carlsby'''[[File:http://armorial.calontir.org/Devices/Aid-Coc.gif|145x174px|right|'''Image''']]'''
*Resident of the Kingdom of the Outlands 1997-2001, 2003-2006
*55th Laurel of Calontir, June 1994, by the Grace of TRM Conn and Sile
*First Cyborg Laurel by decree of HL Vels in-vigalidi, 2015


'''Groups and Affiliations:
given+pat+clan
*Current Group: Barony of Forgotten Sea.
|-
**Prior Groups: Shire of Carlsby; Barony of al-Barran (Outlands)
|'''Welsh'''
*First Laurel from the line of Baron Master Robert of Coldcastle, also his first apprentice
|Late
|Phrase, unmarked
|Marked, unmarked,


'''Offices:
multiple
*Prior Local Offices: Shire treasurer, seneschal, chatelaine. BFS seneschal, chronicler, chatelaine, deputy treasurer
|
*Prior Kingdom Offices: Falcon Signet, deputy F/S, deputy Chronicler, Chronicler, Royal Scribe to TRM Matsunaga and Elena, RUSH Regent Kansas/Nebraska; KMOAS
|Yes
*Other service: Event steward - Kris Kinder (2x), KC RenFest SCA Dell (2x), misc. other events.
|
*Current: Event Steward - Kris Kinder 2019
|Yes
|given+byname


=Other Information=
given+pat+pat
|-
|'''Scots'''
|
|Phrase (as in English),


*[https://www.facebook.com/HollynotabotinKC Facebook]
unmarked
*[@https://www.pinterest.com/msaidan/ Pinterest]
|Marked (with ''Mac'' or as in English), unmarked
[[File:TFT 2019 Cropped.jpg|thumb|Pimping Kris Kinder]]
|As in English only
|Yes
|
|Yes
|given+pat+loc


given+pat+pat


=Rat out a Friend=
given+pat+descr
|}
'''Notes''':


*Mistress Aidan, thank you so much for taking the time to go collect rocks and clay, to sit with my son and his friends and teach them about making pigment out of rocks. He was full of information and telling me about everything you taught him, from the clay and it's processing, to the rock you used to grind the rocks, to which feather is better to use for quills. The samples were amazing! Thank you again so much! - Siobhan MacKee
Old English: Patronymics take form of ''X sunu''/''sune'' or ''Xdohtor'' (X is father's name in genitive); they must match the given name's gender. Alternately, they may follow the Latinized patterns. Locatives use ''æt'' or ''of'' followed by the placename in dative form. See the introduction to Reaney and Wilson ''A Dictionary of English Surnames'' for more details.


{|
Middle/Early Modern English: Marked patronymics may use ''Fitz X'' or ''Xson''; women may use these or use ''Xdaughter''. These forms may all use the father's name unmodified; ''Xson'' and ''Xdaughter'' may also use the possessive form. Alternately, they may follow the Latinized patterns. Late period family names tend to drop articles and prepositions. See the introduction to Reaney and Wilson ''A Dictionary of English Surnames'' for more details. Surnames from the second half of the 16th C and early 17th C may be used as given names; they are treated as any other 16th C given name [Alton of Grimfells, 04/2010, A-East].
|[[File:JibFealtyScroll.jpg]]||Mistress Aidan made this scroll for Master [[Jibra'il `Attar]]. It is his fealty oath, as spoken in Farsi, during his elevation ceremony to the Order of the [[Laurel]].
|}


[[File:CearaCrossScroll.jpg]]
Anglicized Irish: See Mari ingen Briain meic Donnchada, "Names Found in Anglicized Irish Documents"(<nowiki>http://medievalscotland.org/kmo/AnglicizedIrish/</nowiki>) for details of how patronymic bynames are marked.
Calon Cross Scroll for Mistress Cara Wythers
Calligraphy style is from 9th century exemplars of Anglo Saxon writings. Illumination based on the Benedictional of St. Aethelwold, 975 AD, English. 
       
[[Index.php?title=Category:Laurels|Illumination]]
[[Category:People]]
[[Category:Carlsby]]
[[Category:Forgotten Sea]]
[[Category:Seneschals]]
[[Category:Exchequers]]
[[Category:Chatelaines]]
[[Category:Chroniclers]]
[[Category:Scribes]]
[[Category:Event Stewards]]
[[Category:RUSH Regents]]
[[Category:Torse]]
[[Category:Calligraphy]]
[[Category:Illumination]]
[[Category:Scribal Arts]]
[[Category:Golden Calon Swan]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Scribal Arts }}
[[Category:Cut and Thrust]]

Latest revision as of 09:46, 29 December 2024

English/Welsh

Double Given Names Locative Patronymic Other relationship Descriptive/

Occupational

Dictus Double Bynames Order
Old English No Phrase (æt X or of X) Marked, unmarked Rare Yes; using Cognomento given+byname
Middle/Early Modern

English

Late All forms: Phrase (de X, of X, atte Y, de la/del Y, etc.); unmarked, adjectival,

inn sign (atte Z, of the Z)

Marked, genitive alone, unmarked Matronymic, many others, marked and unmarked Yes, may use article the/le or omit it. Yes; marked Yes; all patterns late (these are generally unmarked) given+byname

given+byname+loc

given+pat+descr

given+byname+byname

Anglicized Irish No Marked, multi-generation Clan names Rare Yes given+byname

given+pat+pat

given+pat+clan

Welsh Late Phrase, unmarked Marked, unmarked,

multiple

Yes Yes given+byname

given+pat+pat

Scots Phrase (as in English),

unmarked

Marked (with Mac or as in English), unmarked As in English only Yes Yes given+pat+loc

given+pat+pat

given+pat+descr

Notes:

Old English: Patronymics take form of X sunu/sune or Xdohtor (X is father's name in genitive); they must match the given name's gender. Alternately, they may follow the Latinized patterns. Locatives use æt or of followed by the placename in dative form. See the introduction to Reaney and Wilson A Dictionary of English Surnames for more details.

Middle/Early Modern English: Marked patronymics may use Fitz X or Xson; women may use these or use Xdaughter. These forms may all use the father's name unmodified; Xson and Xdaughter may also use the possessive form. Alternately, they may follow the Latinized patterns. Late period family names tend to drop articles and prepositions. See the introduction to Reaney and Wilson A Dictionary of English Surnames for more details. Surnames from the second half of the 16th C and early 17th C may be used as given names; they are treated as any other 16th C given name [Alton of Grimfells, 04/2010, A-East].

Anglicized Irish: See Mari ingen Briain meic Donnchada, "Names Found in Anglicized Irish Documents"(http://medievalscotland.org/kmo/AnglicizedIrish/) for details of how patronymic bynames are marked.