Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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Not Quite University Challenge
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Andy Freude
Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View PostDid the name "Stephen" exist in whatever demotic language was being used at the time? I assume anybody who could write used either Stephanus or Étienne.
Sorry, I can only offer -
East Good Bread Dear Father and Good Bread Dear Father Ate which is a bit pathetic.
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Oakapple
Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View PostHe is now, as I know, but what was he called then? Did the name "Stephen" exist in whatever demotic language was being used at the time? I assume anybody who could write used either Stephanus or Étienne.
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Andy Freude
Originally posted by Oakapple View PostIn the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, in the English of the time at Peterborough, his name is written Stephne.
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Andy Freude
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI wonder of the name Stepney, for the district in east London, derives from that.
"The first surviving record of the place name is from around 1000 AD as Stybbanhyð, "Stybba's hyð"; hyð developed into hithe (meaning landing-place) in modern English, so "Stybba's landing-place". The parish of Stebbing in Essex also appears to have taken its name from an individual called Stybba"
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Originally posted by Andy Freude View PostThis might be getting a bit too close to the real UC to be on topic but -
"The first surviving record of the place name is from around 1000 AD as Stybbanhyð, "Stybba's hyð"; hyð developed into hithe (meaning landing-place) in modern English, so "Stybba's landing-place". The parish of Stebbing in Essex also appears to have taken its name from an individual called Stybba"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stepney#Etymology
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Originally posted by Andy Freude View PostWe know that Stephen's successor, Henry II, had a chaplain called Etienne de Fougeres, and his name was written as Esteinvre de Fougeres, and St Stephen was Saint Estenvre. So people at the English court would have said something like that. Ordinary people who spoke some form of English may not have known the king's name.
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