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{| class="wikitable" | |||
| colspan="3" |'''Jesus''' | |||
|- | |||
|Alisoun MacCoul of Elphane | |||
|1990.04.29 | |||
|This name caused a certain amount of controversy since it is by no means clear that "Jesus" was used by ordinary individuals in period and there is some evidence from Dauzat that it may have been "taboo" during the medieval period. (LoAR 29 Apr 90, p. 3) | |||
|} | |||
=== SENA Appendix A: Patterns That Do Not Need Further Documentation... === | |||
http://heraldry.sca.org/sena.html#AppendixA (as of 12 October 2013) | |||
'''Jewish''' | |||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
| | |||
|'''Double Given Names''' | |||
|'''Locative''' | |||
|'''Patronymic''' | |||
|'''Other relationship''' | |||
|'''Descriptive/Occupational''' | |||
|'''Dictus''' | |||
|'''Double Bynames''' | |||
|'''Order''' | |||
|- | |||
|'''Hebrew''' | |||
|No | |||
| | |||
|Marked; multi-generational | |||
|Tribe name (men only), like ha Levi | |||
|''ha'' [noun], feminized for women | |||
| | |||
|Multi-generation patronymic | |||
|given+byname | |||
given+pat+pat | |||
|- | |||
|'''Vernacular''' | |||
| | |||
|(see notes) | |||
|(see notes) | |||
| | |||
|(see notes) | |||
| | |||
|Multi-generation patronymic | |||
|given+byname | |||
|} | |||
'''Notes''': | |||
Jews lived in a location where a vernacular was spoken (German, Arabic, etc.) Men generally had a Hebrew language name and a vernacular name. The vernacular name may be the equivalent of their Hebrew name or an unrelated vernacular name. Women generally had vernacular names only (often the same as local naming pool). | |||
Hebrew: Patronymic bynames are formed using ''ben B'' "son of B," and ''bat'' ''B'' (Sephardic) or ''basB'' (Ashkenazic) "daughter of B" | |||
Vernacular: Vernacular bynames often follow the Hebrew forms (so mostly patronymic), but are generally written following the standards for the local vernacular. Occasionally, the particles are transliterated from the Hebrew (e.g., "N ''filius'' B ''ben'' C" in a Latin document). Other kinds of bynames (especially locative bynames and the byname meaning "Jew" in the vernacular) are found as well. | |||
---- | |||
=== '''SENA Appendix C: Regional Naming Groups and Their Mixes''' === | |||
http://heraldry.sca.org/laurel/sena.html#AppendixC | |||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
|'''Regional Groups:''' | |||
|'''By Time Period:''' | |||
|'''Languages Included In This Group:''' | |||
|'''Can Be Combined With Groups:''' | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="2" |'''Jewish''' | |||
|550-1100 | |||
|Hebrew, Yiddish, etc. | |||
|Special: Jewish names documented from location X are registerable with (1) other names documented from the languages for that language group and (2) with other Jewish names documented from other parts of Europe | |||
|- | |||
|1100-1600 | |||
|Hebrew, Yiddish, etc. | |||
|Special: Jewish names documented from location X are registerable with (1) other names documented from the languages for that language group and (2) with other Jewish names documented from other parts of Europe | |||
|} |
Revision as of 18:03, 4 August 2018
Testing stuff...
Jesus | ||
Alisoun MacCoul of Elphane | 1990.04.29 | This name caused a certain amount of controversy since it is by no means clear that "Jesus" was used by ordinary individuals in period and there is some evidence from Dauzat that it may have been "taboo" during the medieval period. (LoAR 29 Apr 90, p. 3) |
SENA Appendix A: Patterns That Do Not Need Further Documentation...
http://heraldry.sca.org/sena.html#AppendixA (as of 12 October 2013)
Jewish
Double Given Names | Locative | Patronymic | Other relationship | Descriptive/Occupational | Dictus | Double Bynames | Order | |
Hebrew | No | Marked; multi-generational | Tribe name (men only), like ha Levi | ha [noun], feminized for women | Multi-generation patronymic | given+byname
given+pat+pat | ||
Vernacular | (see notes) | (see notes) | (see notes) | Multi-generation patronymic | given+byname |
Notes:
Jews lived in a location where a vernacular was spoken (German, Arabic, etc.) Men generally had a Hebrew language name and a vernacular name. The vernacular name may be the equivalent of their Hebrew name or an unrelated vernacular name. Women generally had vernacular names only (often the same as local naming pool).
Hebrew: Patronymic bynames are formed using ben B "son of B," and bat B (Sephardic) or basB (Ashkenazic) "daughter of B"
Vernacular: Vernacular bynames often follow the Hebrew forms (so mostly patronymic), but are generally written following the standards for the local vernacular. Occasionally, the particles are transliterated from the Hebrew (e.g., "N filius B ben C" in a Latin document). Other kinds of bynames (especially locative bynames and the byname meaning "Jew" in the vernacular) are found as well.
SENA Appendix C: Regional Naming Groups and Their Mixes
http://heraldry.sca.org/laurel/sena.html#AppendixC
Regional Groups: | By Time Period: | Languages Included In This Group: | Can Be Combined With Groups: |
Jewish | 550-1100 | Hebrew, Yiddish, etc. | Special: Jewish names documented from location X are registerable with (1) other names documented from the languages for that language group and (2) with other Jewish names documented from other parts of Europe |
1100-1600 | Hebrew, Yiddish, etc. | Special: Jewish names documented from location X are registerable with (1) other names documented from the languages for that language group and (2) with other Jewish names documented from other parts of Europe |