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Vikings 1x6 vs. The Last Kingdom 2x5
Godwine
Godwine is an Anglo-Saxon masculine name composed of god (god) and wine (friend), cognate with Icelandic Guðvin. The same two elements also occur in Winegod.
Variants:
Godwine [Sharon Turner 1805 The History of the Anglo-Saxons, 1st edition, 4: 50].
Godwin [Sharon Turner 1805 The History of the Anglo-Saxons, 1st edition, 4: 69].
Goduuinus [Joseph Stevenson 1841 Liber Vitæ Ecclesiæ Dunelmensis, page 13].
Godwinus [Joseph Stevenson 1841 Liber Vitæ Ecclesiæ Dunelmensis, page 49].
Goduine [Henry Sweet 1886 The Oldest English Texts, page 584].
Godvine [Ernst Förstemann 1900 Altdeutsches Namenbuch, volume 1, 2nd edition, column 686].
Goduin(e) [Elizabeth Withycombe 1945 The Oxford Dictionary of English Christian Names, 1st edition, page 61].
Godeuuin [Elizabeth Withycombe 1945 The Oxford Dictionary of English Christian Names, 1st edition, page 61].
Gŏdwine [Percy Reaney 1958 A Dictionary of Surnames, 1st edition, page 138].
Goduinn [John Insley, David Rollason, & Peter McClure 2007 The Durham Liber Vitae 2: 122].
Godwini [John Insley, David Rollason, & Peter McClure 2007 The Durham Liber Vitae 2: 122].
Godeƿine [Oswin Kinsey 2016 English Compound Names, 2nd edition, page 65].
Note:
Forms ending with -us are Latinizations.
Prototheme:
god = god [Ernest Weekley 1939 Jack and Jill, 1st edition, page 29].
Deuterotheme:
Wine = friend [Robert Ferguson 1883 Surnames as a Science, page 67].
Usage:
Godwine was the name of an Earl of Wessex [William Searle 1899 Anglo-Saxon Bishops, Kings and Nobles, page 358]. “And on þys ylcan geare man flymde Godwine eorl. and ealle his suna. of Englalande. And he gewende to Bricge. and his wif and his iii suna. Swegen. and Tostig. and Gyrð. and Harold and Leofwine wendon to Irlande. and þær wunedon þæne winter” [John Earle 1865 Two of the Saxon Chronicles Parallel, 1st edition, page 176, annal (C) 1051]: “And in this same year were banished earl Godwin and all his sons from England; and he went to Bruges and his wife and three of his sons, Swegen and Tostig and Gyrth; and Harold and Leofwin went to Ireland and abode there through the winter” (Edward Gomme 1909 The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, page 148, annal 1051 [C]).
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