AVALON
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King Arthur Pages
King
Arthur’s
Marriage
to Guinevere
Vortigern
Gwrtheyrn in Welsh
The
Meaning of the Name
The name Vortigern, which has been anglicized as, appears in
the oldest Welsh records as Guorthigirn and in
modern Welsh as Gwrtheyrn. The Venerable Bede, writing in Latin, uses the very early forms Vertigernus and Uurtigernus;
in the later Anglo-Saxon texts these are rendered as Wyrtgeorn.
The meaning is explained as ' High Lord' or 'Overlord'. Tigern- does not quite have the meaning
of 'King', which is usually represented in names with the form 'Rex', as in Ri(othamus) or (Vortime)Rix, though a
more loose translation with 'king' may not be totally incorrect.
Superbus Tyrannus? Proud Tyrant or Arrogant Usurper; The title bestowed on Vortigern by
Gildas
Gildas in his De Excidio
et Conquestu Britanniae
“The Overthrow and Conquest of Britain” circa
540 CE does not seem to mention the name
of Vortigern, only the probable pun on his name, superbus tyrannus,
“Proud Tyrant or Arrogant Usurper” though some manuscripts of Gildas actually do mention him directly.
This phrase, together with the occurrence of the name twice in the
works of the Venerable Bede and once in manuscript A
of Gildas but not in the oldest manuscript, C, had
led to speculation among historians. The best interpretation seems to be that
British *Wortigernos was the man's name, and
only the fact that Mommsens's popular edition was
based on manuscript C, which lacked it, gave rise to these speculations of
interpolation by Bede or others in the first place.
We have seen that Gildas may have written superbo tyranno Vortigerno after all, and that this may well be why it
appeared in Bede. In any case, the point is that in
calling him 'arrogant usurper' he was characteristically playing on the meaning
of the British *Wortigernos in exactly the
same way as he did with that of Aurelius Caninus, Vortiporius, Cuneglasus and Maelgwn.
Superbus tyrannus does not mean 'outstanding
ruler' or 'high king' and is not the Latin translation of *Wortigernos.
Latin superbus means
'arrogant', 'haughty' or 'proud', and most certainly not 'superior'. Latin tyrannos was borrowed from Greek and had always a
negative meaning of unconstitutionality or despotism.
The name Vertigernus or Vortigern means overlord or high lord.
Gildas was punning it in his usual way, and getting
an offensive meaning out of it, by rendering *wor
not by Latin super but by superbus
'arrogant, proud', and *tigernos not by dominus 'lord' but by tyrannus
'despot, usurper'.
But Gildas may have had yet more in mind
with choosing this pun. To the latin
reader, superbus had another meaning, namely
that of the name of Tarquinius Superbus
(Tarquin the Proud), the last (non-Roman) ruler of
Theosophy
Avalon
King
Arthur &
The
Round Table
Merlin
& The Tree of Life
Merlin the Magician
Born circa 400 CE ;
Welsh: Myrddin;
Latin: Merlinus;
English: Merlin.
The
Holy Grail
The Theosophy
King
Arthur Pages
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