Winterfylleth

{{Short description|Anglo-Saxon or Old English name for October}}

{{For|the English black metal band|Winterfylleth (band)}}

Winterfylleth (Ƿinterfylleþ) was the Anglo-Saxon or Old English name for the month of October. It marked and celebrated the beginning of winter.{{cite web|url=http://www.wearetheenglish.com/yuletide%20calendar.html|title=Article on English Culture - The Anglo-Saxon Heathen Year|publisher=wearetheenglish.com|accessdate=2014-09-20}}

The name of the month was recorded by Bede thus:

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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.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. .

|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

{{Portal|Anglo-Saxon England}}

References

{{reflist}}

{{Anglo-Saxon months}}

{{Norse mythology}}

{{Anglo-SaxonPaganism}}

Category:October

Category:Old English