Thame vs Thane - What's the difference?
thame | thane |
(Scotland, obsolete) them
* {{quote-book
, year=1797
, author= Edinburgh Magazine: Or Literary Miscellany
, title=
, chapter=
* {{quote-book
, year=1846
, author=Thomas M'Cri et al
, title= Lives of the Scottish Reformers
, chapter=
(historical) A rank of nobility in pre-Norman England, roughly equivalent to baron."
* 1845 , (translator), A History of England under the Anglo-Saxon Kings , 2004,
* 1910 , Robert A. Thompson, The People's History of England , Walter Scott Publishing, New York,
* 2000 , '', ''Anglo-Saxon Spirituality: Selected Writings ,
As a pronoun thame
is (scotland|obsolete) them.As a noun thane is
cranberry shrub.thame
English
Pronoun
(English Pronouns)citation, isbn= , page=180 , passage=...And to charge thame' hereto under the pain of rebellion and putting of ' thame to thr horne...}}
citation, isbn= , page=190 , passage=...that we communicat with thame' in nathing that may appeir to manteane or defend ' thame ...}}
Derived terms
* thameselvesAnagrams
*thane
English
(Thegn)Alternative forms
* thegnNoun
(en noun)thane]", entry in 1852', ''Putnam's Home Cyclopedia: Hand-Book of Literature and the Fine Arts'', p594 — The '''thanes''' in England were formerly persons of some dignity; there were two orders, the king's '''thanes''', who attended the kings in their courts and held lands immediately of them, and the ordinary '''thanes , who were lords of manors and who had particular jurisdiction within their limits.After the [NormanConquest, this title was disused, and ''baron took its place.
page 317,
- The Anglo-Saxon thanes were in all respects the predecessors of the Norman barons.
- The title of thane seems to have supplanted that of gesith, which appears only in the earner Anglo-Saxon laws, a denomination that may originally have designated the attendants or companions of the king, and whose wergild being triple that of the simple freeman, were, therefore, denominated not only gesithcund men, but six-hynde men.
- The little island of Iona became the refuge of the sons and some thanes of Athelfrith, banished by Edwin.
page 144,
- Although some serfs escape from their lord and turn away from Christendom to the Vikings and after this it happens that the clash of swords becomes common to thane' and serf, if the serf utterly kills the ' thane , he lies unpaid by all of the serf's kin.