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A rather over-romantic portrait of Queen Eleanor of Aquitaine
In this blogposting…
* Names
* Stranger Than Fiction
* AGM XXIX
Proceed with caution...


NAMES
I recently idled away an hour or so looking up the derivations of the names of some of the people I know.  The results, though trivial in the extreme, were nevertheless interesting - especially to a logophile like me.

STUART
My real forename is derived from sty-ward, the ‘pig-keeper’.  Poetic justice gone mad.

Apparently, it only became popular as a given name in the 19th century, when it appealed to romantic Victorians because of the Stuart royal family, which produced several kings and queens of Scotland and Britain between the 14th and 18th centuries.

HILDA
This started out as a short form of names containing the Germanic element hild, ‘battle.  No comment. It was used for both Old English and continental Germanic names.

Saint Hilda was a celebrated 7th-century English saint and abbess who began her spotless life at Hartlepool and ended it not far away at Whitby.

The name became rare in England during the later Middle Ages, but was revived in the 19th century.

SIDNEY
There’s some disagreement about this name, unsurprisingly.

Some experts think it was originally derived from various place names in England meaning ‘wide island’ - a likely story.

Others have suggested that it comes from the name of a town in Normandy called Saint Denis (the patron saint of France). 

In either case, it was first used as a given name in honour of executed politician Algernon Sidney (1622-1683).  Another notable bearer of the surname was the poet and statesman Sir Philip Sidney (1554-1586).

LINDA
Originally a medieval short form of Germanic names containing the element linde, ‘soft, tender’.  Again - no comment.

It also coincides with the Spanish word linda meaning ‘beautiful’.

KEITH
This Scottish name was originally derived from a place name, itself probably derived from British cet, ‘wood’ - although the linguistic link isn’t obvious to me.  Keith occurs in quite a few Scottish place-names, like Dalkeith - ‘valley with a wood’.

It was the surname of a long line of Scottish earls and has been used as a popular given name since the 19th century.

NEVILLE
This is an easy one.  Derived directly from a Norman French place-name meaning ‘new town’ - neuf-ville.

ADA
This is, of course, the short familiar form of Adelaide and other names beginning with the same sound.

It’s been popular since the mid-19th century, when it was borne by Augusta Ada King (1815-1852), the Countess of Lovelace (known as Ada Lovelace), a daughter of Lord Byron. Interestingly, she was an assistant to Charles Babbage, the inventor of an early mechanical computer.

VIVIENNE
Hereby hangs a tale.

This is the feminine form of Vivianus.  Who he?  Keep reading.

Saint Vivianus (also known as Bibiana) was a either a Roman saint and martyr of the 4th century or a French bishop who provided protection during the Visigoth invasion of the 5th century. It apparently means ‘living, alive’, which seems inappropriate, considering.

It was used occasionally as an English (masculine) name from the Middle Ages but it’s only in modern times that it’s been adopted as a feminine name, too.

ELLIE
We’re back to France again for this familiar, shortened form of Eleanor.

It comes from the Provençal name Aliénor and, unusually, we know exactly who first bore the name - Eleanor of Aquitaine - the queen of Louis VII, king of France, and later of Henry II, king of England.

She was originally named Aenor, after her mother, but was called by the Provençal phrase alia Aenor, ‘the other Aenor’, in order to distinguish her from her parent.

Eleanor has been a hugely popular name ever since the Middle Ages, largely due to the fame of the original.  Indeed, two queens from the following century had the same name:  Eleanor of Provence, the wife of Henry III, and Eleanor of Castile, the wife of Edward I.

So now you know.  I hope you appreciate all the effort that’s gone into this.

STRANGER THAN FICTION
Just when we think we’ve got the hang of it, the world comes up with something so staggeringly unbelievable that we almost have to go back to square one and re-think our view of the planet.

In a tiny corner of western Poland, for example, there’s a very strange forest indeed.

Hidden deep in what is otherwise a fairly unremarkable - not to say predictable - woodland of pines and firs and larches and stuff like that lies a mysterious copse which has puzzled and amused both local people and dendrologists for over 70 years. 

Go for a tramp in this wood (no jokes, please) and you’ll discover a clutch of about 400 pine trees growing with a 90-degree bend at the base of their trunks.  As if that weren’t enough to stop you in your tracks, keen observation will show that, without exception, they are all bent toward the north.

The area is known as the Crooked Forest, for fairly obvious reasons, and to save you the trouble of actually having to go to Poland to verify this unlikely tale, I append a picture of the trees in question.  Look at it and gasp.
The real mystery, however, is not that they grow in such an unnatural - though not entirely unpleasant - way, but why.  It’s known that the trees were planted around 1930 and that they managed to grow normally (in that staunchly upright way that trees have) for between seven and ten years.

But then something inexplicable happened.  The tree-farmers who were caring for them applied some sort of mechanical weight (or so it’s thought) to the bases of their nascent trunks with the result you see in the picture. 

Exactly why they did this is unknown.  Nobody knows what possible use tree trunks of this shape could possibly have or what advantage the foresters were hoping to gain.

Perhaps they did it just for fun.  If only someone had asked.

AGM XXIX
Our next AGM will take place at 1100 on Wednesday 19 October. 

If you have any suggestions for venues, get in touch in any of the many useful ways available to you.

Wherever it takes place, come prepared to plank.

CONTACT ME
Post comments on this blog or email me:  truckshunters@googlemail.com

6 comments:

Hildie said...

I like how the trees look ....
I just hope they're not aching!!!

What's the name of that cafe,Ian, where 'The Iron Man' stands?
I was trying, on the previous blog, to hand it in as a venue suggestion for
AGM XXIX.

Serge said...

Bonjour BB
et Bonjour a tous les truckshunters.

Aujourd'hui lundi 3 octobre 2011,stuart est tres triste,sa maman vient de nous quitter,je suis triste aussi,elle va nous manquer.
m
Mes condoleances,je suis de tout coeur avec toi,bisous.
serge

bonjour Hildie,tu feras la traduction au autres,MERCI.

Vivienne said...

Hi Folks!

Well Ian, I now understand why I receive soooo many spam emails trying to sell me viagra!!!

Hildie said...

I know that every one of you will be sad to hear the news that Serge has just given us. It is the saddest news ....
Ian's Mam has died today.
The last two months have been very difficult for Ian and Serge and for Ian's brother (and their whole family) because they did know that today was coming. I'm sure you will agree, though, that no matter how prepared you think you are for this eventuality .... you never really, truly are. I'm sure you will keep them in your thoughts and hearts in the coming days.
I had the great priviledge of meeting Ian's Mam a couple of times in the last year ... I had tea and cake with her, in her garden, amongst the apples that had fallen from her tree ....
two afternoons in her delightful company that I will forever treasure.
I watched the pair of them, Ian and his Mam .... I was tickled by the jokey exchanges between them
.... the fun they had together. As you can imagine ... she was truly adorable ...... and it was apparent she was very loved, and so was he ....
I believe he will always carry his Mam's love with him wherever he goes.

Ian Robinson said...

Une reponse n'est pas possible - les mots me manque. Vous etes tres gentils est prevenants et je suis soulage par votre pensee...
A reply is impossible - the words fail me. You are very kind and considerate and I am comforted by your thoughts...
Merci - et je t'aime aussi...
XXXXXX

Ellie said...

Ian - I cannot think of what to say that would be of comfort to you.
From what Hildie described, your Mum was one special, special lady. Lots of love to you, her special, special son and all of your family.