England Bro-Saoz |
Northumberland *** |
Rudchester
Vindobala
| page ouverte le 06.09.2006 | |
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dernière mise à jour 08/09/2008 13:47:38 |
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| Définition : ville d'Angleterre; comté de Northumberland. Ancienne forteresse romaine du Mur d'Hadrien : Vindobala. |
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Extrait de la carte Ordnance Survey : Map of Roman Britain. |
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Histoire : |
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| Étymologie :
* Rivet & Smith : SOURCES - Ravenna 10725 (= R&C 145) : VINDOVALA - ND XL36 : Tribunus cohortis primae Frixagorum, VINDOBALA DERIVATION. The first element is British *uindo- 'white', also 'bright, fair' and 'happy, fortunate', now represented by Welsh gwyn; also Old Irish find, Irish finn, fionn (English winter 'white time'). This is a first element in the five following names, and is frequently represented in Continental toponymy from Illyria and Pannonia to Spain; it is also present in many personal names, e.g. British Vindomorucus (RIB 2053, Drumburgh). In some Continental regions Celtic *uindo- is to be distinguished from an element of similar appearance, *vin- *vin-t-, a pre-Indo-European word meaning 'mountain' (Rostaing ETP 290). Examples of names with *uindo- which survive include Vindobona > Vienna, Vindonissa > Windisch (Switzerland) and Vindobriga > Vendoeuvre (eight in France and one in Switzerland). The second element requires us to trust ND's -bala rather than Ravennas -vala (ND is in any case the more trustworthy of the two texts). The name hardly con-tains the root *ual- 'strong', as R&C thought, for if it did, we should expect it to appear as -valium (or -vallum) in the present name, as in othcr British examples (see BANNOVALIUM). Moreover, R&C's meaning 'white strength' seems unnatural. Nor is it likely that both ND and Ravenna have committed identical errors in miscopying r as l, despite the temptation to make an association with a *Vindovara 'eau blanche' postulated by Dauzat in Gaul (TF 116-17), and there is no consonant present in the British name which could have provoked an r-l metathesis. If we take -bala, it seems right to associate mis with the root *bal- discussed under *Nemetobala; a meaning for the whole of 'white peak', perhaps 'bright peak', seems proper. IDENTIFICATION. The Roman fort at Rudchester, Northumberland (NZ 1167). ND's unit name is evidently a garbled form of Cohors I Frisiavonum, whose earlier presence in Britain is attested by diplomas and who probably formed the garrison of Rudchester in the third century (see RIB 1395, note). |
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| Sources :
* Eilert Ekwall : The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English place-names. Clarendon Press. fourth edition, 1980. * Ordnance Survey : Map of Roman Britain. * ALF Rivet & Colin Smith : The Place-Names of Roman Britain. Batsford Ltd. London. 1979. |
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