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Testing stuff...


http://heraldry.sca.org/laurel/precedents/CompiledNamePrecedents/Compatible.html
{| class="wikitable"
| colspan="3" |'''Gweneth, Gwineth, Gwyneth, Gwynneth'''
|-
|Elsbeth Anne Roth
|2001.02
|... ''Gwyneth'' has been ruled SCA compatible. ['''Gwyneth Lewelyne''', [http://sca.org/heraldry/loar/2001/05/01-02lar.html 02/01], A-Atlantia]
|-
|Elsbeth Anne Roth
|2000.08
|Submitted on the LoI as ''Gwineth of Iona'', the given name was originally submitted as ''Gwyneth''. As Jaelle of Armida, then Laurel, wrote in the November 1997 LoAR,
* Morgan & Morgan note the feminine Welsh given name ''Gwineth'' in 1577. Therefore, ''Gwyneth'' is acceptable as a plausible variant of that name.We have therefore chagned the name back to the submitted form. ['''Gwyneth of Iona''', [http://sca.org/heraldry/loar/2000/08/00-08lar.html 08/00], A-Caid]
|-
|Jaelle of Armida
|1999.06
|[Gweneth ferch Morgan] No acceptable documentation was presented for ''Gweneth''. However, since Morgan and Morgan's ''Welsh Surnames''has ''Gwineth'' dated to 1577 and ''Gwentt'' dated to 1629, ''Gweneth'' is a reasonable period form. (Jaelle of Armida, LoAR June 1999, p. 2)
|-
|Jaelle of Armida
|1997.11
|Morgan & Morgan note the feminine Welsh given name Gwineth in 1577. Therefore, Gwyneth is acceptable as a plausible variant of that name. (Jaelle of Armida, LoAR November 1997, p. 1)
|-
|Da'ud ibn Auda (2nd tenure, 2nd year)
|1996.03
|[Gwynneth] The only period evidence available for the given name is the citation Gwineth ver' Robert 1577 given by Morgan & Morgan, s.n. Gwynedd. However, they show that the surname Gwynedd occasionally appears with nn in the 16th century. The names are probably not related, but this orthographic variation still offers some support for the possibility that Gwynneth is an acceptable variant of the attested given name. (Talan Gwynek, LoAR March 1996, p. 4)
|-
|Da'ud ibn Auda (2nd tenure, 1st year)
|1993.12b
|[Returning Gwynedd Fairfax.] Gwynedd, though found in Withycombe's Oxford Dictionary of English Christian Names, is only noted there as an undated, modern form. The closest documentable period given name is Gwineth. [12b/93, p.13]
|-
|Alisoun MacCoul of Elphane
|1987.02.28
|The name Gwyneth was almost certainly a late derivation from the geographic name Gwynedd and was not a given name in period. I have to agree that Gwynedd, which is the usual spelling for the place, should not be allowed in the Society as a given name. However, the name Gwyneth seems to have acquired a separate existence in the Society and has been registered at least twenty times (as Gwyneth or Gwynaeth) including more than one occurrence within the last year. I have to conclude that Gwyneth should belong to that select group of non-period names like Corwin or Fiona that the Society at large has elected as being "compatible". (LoAR 28 Feb 87, p. 2)
|}
http://heraldry.sca.org/laurel/precedents/CompiledNamePrecedents/Compatible.html
{| class="wikitable"
| colspan="3" |'''Gwythyr, Gwither'''
|-
|François la Flamme
|2001.11
|There was some discussion that ''Gwythyr'' might be a name that was not used by real humans in period. Morgan and Morgan (p. 119 s.n. Gwythyr) date ''Rees Gwither'' to 1584, so the submitted name is registerable. It has one weirdness for using an SCA compatible given name. ['''Branwen ferch Gwythyr''', [http://sca.org/heraldry/loar/2001/11/01-11lar.html 11/01], A-East]
|}

Latest revision as of 10:42, 17 December 2022