The ''Durham Plant-Name Glossary'' (MS Durham, Cathedral Library, Hunter 100) is a glossary translating Latin and Greek plant-names into
Old English
Old English ( or , or ), or Anglo-Saxon, is the earliest recorded form of the English language, spoken in England and southern and eastern Scotland in the Early Middle Ages. It developed from the languages brought to Great Britain by Anglo-S ...
/
Middle English
Middle English (abbreviated to ME) is a form of the English language that was spoken after the Norman Conquest of 1066, until the late 15th century. The English language underwent distinct variations and developments following the Old English pe ...
. It was copied in Durham in the early twelfth century. Its principal sources were Greek-Latin-Old English plant-name glossary whose lemmata come from
Dioscorides
Pedanius Dioscorides (, ; 40–90 AD), "the father of pharmacognosy", was a Greek physician, pharmacologist, botanist, and author of (in the original , , both meaning "On Materia medica, Medical Material") , a 5-volume Greek encyclopedic phar ...
’s ''
De materia medica'', which also contributed lemmata and glosses to the
Épinal-Erfurt glossaries, and those entries in the ''
Old English Herbarium'' which translate Latin plant-names with vernacular plant-names. A text very like the ''Durham Plant-Name Glossary'' was one major source of the more extensive ''
Laud Herbal Glossary''.
[Rusche, Philip Guthrie. 2008. ‘The sources for plant names in Anglo-Saxon England and the Laud Herbal Glossary’, in ''Health and Healing in the Medieval Garden'', ed. by Peter Dendle and Alan Touwaide, 128–44. Woodbridge: Boydell and Brewer.]
References
Old English literature
Glossaries
12th-century books
Botany books
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