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Winterfylleth

Winterfylleth (Ƿinterfylleþ) was the Anglo-Saxon or Old English name for the month of October. It marked and celebrated the beginning of winter.

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Winterfylleth (Ƿinterfylleþ) was the Anglo-Saxon or Old English name for the month of October. It marked and celebrated the beginning of winter.1

The name of the month was recorded by Bede thus:

Antiqui Anglorum populi ... annum totum in duo tempora, hiemis et aestatis dispertiebant, sex menses ... aestati tribuendo, sex reliquos hiemi; unde et mensem, quo hiemalia tempora incipiebant, Ƿintirfylliþ appellabant, composito nomine ab hieme et plenilunio, quia videlicet a plenilunio ejusdem mensis hiems sortiretur initium ... Ƿintirfylliþ potest dici compositio novo nomine hiemi plenium.2 The old English people split the year into two seasons, summer and winter, placing six months – during which the days are longer than the nights – in summer, and the other six in winter. They called the month when the winter season began Ƿintirfylliþ, a word composed of "winter" and "full moon", because winter began on the first full moon of that month.
See also

See also

References

References

  1. "Article on English Culture – The Anglo-Saxon Heathen Year". wearetheenglish.com. Archived from the original on 2012-10-31. Retrieved 2014-09-20.
  2. Bosworth, Joseph. "An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary Online." Winter-fylleþ. Ed. Thomas Northcote Toller and Others. Comp. Sean Christ and Ondřej Tichý. Faculty of Arts, Charles University in Prague, 21 March 2010. Web. 20 September 2014. <http://bosworth.ff.cuni.cz/035945>.