Open main menu
Home
Random
Recent changes
Special pages
Community portal
Preferences
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers
Incubator escapee wiki
Search
User menu
Talk
Dark mode
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Editing
Isle of Thanet
(section)
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
==Etymology== The island of Thanet is mentioned as ''Tonetic'' (c. AD 150; the TON- of this form was misread as TOΛI-, hence it appears as ''Toliatis'' in the surviving manuscripts of [[Ptolemy]]); ''Tanat's'',{{sfn|De Beaurepaire|1981|p=170}} ''Athanatos'' and ''Thanatos'' (in various copies of 3rd C AD, [[Gaius Julius Solinus|Solinus]]);{{sfn|Brayley|1817|p=6}} ''Tanatos'' (AD 731); ''Tenid'' in 679{{sfn|De Beaurepaire|1981|p=170}} and ''Tenet'' (e.g. charters of AD 679, 689 and thereafter); and the Old Welsh forms ''Tanet'' and ''Danet'', found in the ''[[Historia Brittonum]]'' (c. AD 829/30) and [[Armes Prydein]] (c. AD 930).<ref>[https://www.caitlingreen.org/2015/04/thanet-tanit-and-the-phoenicians.html Blog]</ref> Standard reference works for English place-names (such as [[Eilert Ekwall]]'s ''Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-Names'') state the name ''Tanet'' is known to be [[Common Brittonic|Brythonic]] in origin. Commonly the original meaning of Thanet is thought to be "fire" or "bright island" (''tân'' in [[Welsh language|Modern Welsh]] and ''tan'' in Breton means fire), and this has led to speculation the island was home to an ancient beacon or lighthouse.{{sfn|Ekwall|1960|p=464}}{{sfn|Glover|1976|p=189}}{{sfn|Mills|1998|p=342}} Another theory states that ''Tanet'' is a common European [[Toponymy|toponymic]] creation of Celtic origin, based on the Celtic word ''*tanno-'' meaning "[[Holm-oak|holm oak]]" (compare Breton ''tann'' "sort of oak", Cornish ''glastannen'' "holm oak") and the Celtic suffix ''*-etu'', to mean a collection of trees. Thanet would mean "place of the holm oaks", such as the Northern French [[Saint-Aubin-du-Thenney|Thenney]] (Eure, ''Thaneth'' ab. 1050); [[Tennie]] (Sarthe, ''Tanida'' 9th century) or the Italian Tanedo (Lombardy, ''Tanetum'', [[Tite-Live]]).{{sfn|De Beaurepaire|1981|p=170}} A third theory suggests that the origin of the toponym is the name of the [[Punic religion|Punic goddess]] [[Tanit]].{{sfn|Vennemann|2012}} The 7th-century Archbishop [[Isidore of Seville]] recorded an [[Apocrypha|apocryphal]] folk-etymology in which the island's name is fancifully connected with the Greek word for death ([[Thanatos|Thanatos/Θάνατος]]), stating that Thanet, "an island of the ocean separated from Britain by a narrow channel ... [was] called ''Tanatos'' from the death of serpents; for while it has none of its own, soil taken from it to any place whatsoever kills snakes there."<ref>Isidore of Seville, quoted in {{harvnb|Vennemann|2012|pp=392–3}}.</ref> The ''[[Historia Brittonum]]'', written in the 9th century, states that "''Tanet''" was the name used for the island by the legendary [[Jutes]] [[Hengist and Horsa]], while its name in [[Old Welsh]] was "''Ruoi(c)hin''"; this name may be translated as "gift" (''rhwych'' in [[Modern Welsh]]).{{sfn|Morris|1980|pp=26, 67}}{{sfn|Vennemann|2012|loc=p. 419, n. 42}} Other names used by Britons were "''Ruim''" and "''Ruochim Inis''".{{sfn|Brayley|1817|p=6}}
Edit summary
(Briefly describe your changes)
By publishing changes, you agree to the
Terms of Use
, and you irrevocably agree to release your contribution under the
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
and the
GFDL
. You agree that a hyperlink or URL is sufficient attribution under the Creative Commons license.
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)