was a complete loss to me, Gelling says that the vast majority of place names in England are AngloSaxon, This is why I checked out the book to learn more about these place names, But that's all she says one paragraph, The rest of the book dwells on the Latin etc, place names of England, which are relatively rare, c. Another book that should have been right up my street, Sadly, though it reads as a rebuttal of other experts and slurring archaeologists, I am sure there must have been a different way of getting to the conclusion, However, there were some interesting bits but the book is really for academics and I am a bit surprised that it made a second publishing run, " It is therefore important at the outset to ask people who have no specialist competence in the history of the English language to accept specialist guidance about the meaning of placenames before building a theory on supposed etymology.
" bit heavy going in parts but worth the effort
if you have only a slight interest in place names might be better to get a place name dictionary to dip into when you want the etymology of a name or three
personally i love a good onomastic pleonasm
I found this barely more readable than Placenames in the Landscape and tapped out before the end.
The generalities in placename studies won't get you very far in developing your understanding, but the specifics are actually very situational on each example and going into them becomes tedious very quickly.
The chapters include: The languages, Placenames of Roman Britain, Latin loan words, Celtic survival, the chronology of English placenames, placenames and the archaeologist, personal names, boundaries and meeting places and then Scandi and French placenames.
These sound pretty interesting, However, each one begins with an account of the history of placename history as it relates to the topic of that chapter and there's not a lot in that for the casual reader.
In fact, in places this reads like her getting the last word in on an argument she's had in the past, My interest is limited in what someone wrote inand how this was questioned in thes and how these three examples prove that they were incorrect, Just cut to the chase and tell me how things stand now, Very quickly in each chapter you mentally feel as if you've gonerounds with Mike Tyson, To add insult to this, by the time you get to what should be the meat of each chapter, you discover just how dull it is, The various examples given are fine individually, but taken in total, they wear you down,
I didn't enjoy this book and I gave it up as a bad job before I got to the end, This book was part of my assigned reading for my English PlaceNames course despite some dull patches, I actually found it quite interesting and very informative,
The study of placenames is never one I was at all familiar with until this semester, and as an American studying abroad in England, I came in with a disadvantage in that I knew almost nothing about British names.
But this book, while admittedly often bogged down in individual case studies, still retains enough principles of placenaming to be interesting perhaps even to the casual reader,
Signposts takes a historical approach to placenames, moving through each major language group in British history and discussing its influence on placenames, That being said, there is a disproportionate amount of discussion given to Britonnic and Latin placenames, which are rare, less given to plentiful AngloSaxon names and very, very little given to Scandinavian name which are plentiful in the former Danelaw.
I imagine this is simply because Gelling's interest was mostly in Celtic and Roman names, which are given a thorough treatment,
Thus the book is helpful in guiding readers to points of interest in British placename history and in turning attention to current debates and pitfalls of the beginning learner.
Don't expect an extensive treatise
on what is enormous area of scholarship, but do expect interesting discussion, ooh grumpy. . but one of the definitive books on placenames, Margaret Joy Gelling was an English place name scholar, She worked as a research assistant for the English place names society during thes ands, later she was involved in teaching and lecturing as part of the University of Birminghams Extra Mural studies programme.
She was elected Fellow of the British Academy in, Margaret Joy Gelling was an English place name scholar, She worked as a research assistant for the English place names society during thes ands, later she was involved in teaching and lecturing as part of the University of Birmingham's Extra Mural studies programme.
She was elected Fellow of the British Academy in, sitelink.
Seize Signposts To The Past Crafted By Margaret Gelling Conveyed As Physical Book
Margaret Gelling