Sorley (given name)

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Sorley and Somerled are masculine given names in the English language, Anglicizations of Scottish Gaelic Somhairle and Norse Sumarlidi.

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Etymology

Sorley is an Anglicised form of Somhairle (modernScottish Gaelic pronunciation: [ˈs̪o.ərˠlə] ), a name mutual to both the Irish and Scottish Gaelic languages, which means "summer warrior". The Gaelic name is a form of the English Somerled, and both names are ultimately derived from the Old Norse Old Norse Sumarliðr. [1] A variant form of Sumarliðr is Sumarliði. [2] A variant form of Somerled is Summerlad, a name altered by folk etymology, derived from the words "summer" and "lad". [3] Somhairle is sometimes Anglicised as Samuel , [4] although these two names are etymologically unrelated (the latter being ultimately of Hebrew origin). [5]

The Old Norse personal name likely originated as a byname, meaning "summer-traveller", [6] "summer-warrior", [7] in reference to a Viking, [8] or men who took to raiding during the summer months as opposed to full-time raiders. [9] An early occurrence of the term is sumarliða [10] (sumorlida, perhaps meaning "fleet"), [11] recorded in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle under the year 871. [12] Another early occurrence of the term is Classi Somarlidiorum, [13] meaning "fleet of the sumarliðar", [14] which is recorded in the 12th-century Chronicle of the Kings of Alba , in an account of an attack on Buchan in the mid-10th century. [15] Possibly the earliest record of the personal name occurs in a grant of land in Nottinghamshire by Edgar the Peaceful in 958. [16] Several men with the name are recorded in early Icelandic sources, such as the 10th-century Hrappr Sumarliðason, and his son Sumarliði, Icelanders said to have been of Scottish and Hebridean ancestry. [17] The first historical personage in Orkney with the name was Sumarliði Sigurðsson, Earl of Orkney, eldest son of Sigurðr digri, Earl of Orkney (d. 1014). [18]

List of persons with the given name

Somerled

Somhairle

Sorley

Sumarlidi

See also

Citations

  1. Hanks, Hardcastle & Hodges 2006, pp. 356, 409; Hanks, & Hodges 1997, pp. ix, 230.
  2. Fellows-Jensen 1995, p. 400.
  3. Hanks, Hardcastle & Hodges 2006, p. 409; Hanks, & Hodges 1997, p. 230, 233.
  4. Mark 2003, p. 716.
  5. Hanks, Hardcastle & Hodges 2006, pp. 240–241; Hanks, & Hodges 1997, p. 220.
  6. Abrams 2008, pp. 183–184; Hanks, Hardcastle & Hodges 2006, pp. 356, 409; Hanks, & Hodges 1997, p. 230; Fellows-Jensen 1995, p. 398.
  7. McDonald & McLean 1992, pp. 5–7.
  8. Abrams 2008, pp. 183–184; Fellows-Jensen 1995, p. 398; McDonald & McLean 1992, pp. 5–7.
  9. Woolf 2007, p. 194; Fellows-Jensen 1995, p. 398.
  10. Woolf 2007, p. 194.
  11. Fellows-Jensen 1995, p. 399.
  12. Woolf 2007, p. 194; Fellows-Jensen 1995, p. 399.
  13. McDonald & McLean 1992, p. 7 n. 1; Anderson 1922, pp. 468–469.
  14. Woolf 2007, p. 194.
  15. McDonald & McLean 1992, p. 7 n. 1.
  16. Abrams 2008, pp. 183–184.
  17. Fellows-Jensen 1995, p. 399; McDonald & McLean 1992, p. 7 n. 1.
  18. Fellows-Jensen 1995, p. 398.

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References