[Facts] Re: St. Gerald of Mayo and the Old English form of Gerald
Gerald is plausibly OE although the bishop of Mayo is the only one I see recorded. Depending on dialect it could be Gerweald, Gerweld, and Henry Sweet's chapter on charters has an abbot Garweald but the Onomasticon doesn't give a date. OE typically shifts Germanic /a/ to /æ/, which breaks to /æa/ before l (written ea) or undergoes further umlaut to /e/.Garwoldi looks Italian from Lombard, with w causing leveling of the a up and back.

This message was edited 7/11/2024, 6:45 PM

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St. Gerald of Mayo and the Old English form of Gerald  ·  clevelandkentevans  ·  7/9/2024, 3:45 PM
Re: St. Gerald of Mayo and the Old English form of Gerald  ·  thegriffon  ·  7/11/2024, 6:35 PM
Re: St. Gerald of Mayo and the Old English form of Gerald  ·  elbowin  ·  7/10/2024, 2:42 AM