Why 'Gemæcca'?
I don't normally continue to research once I've begun the the work of actually committing fiction (facts, until they're fully assimilated, tend to sit in great undigested lumps in my imaginative path) but I had to have this book. It took a week or so to arrive and then I promptly devoured it. It not only derailed my imaginative process, it blew the whole thing off its tracks.
The book lays out in detail what Angles and Saxons wore, and how women made it, and how fashions and means of production changed geographically and chronologically. It demonstrates that women must have devoted at least 65% of their time on textile production. Textile production, therefore, more than child care, more than food production, was their major concern. It was a critical task.
The first thing I've had to do is reimagine--totally reimagine--the social networks of a small holding, a settlement, a royal court. A lot of cloth production involves cooperative behaviour; a lot involves two-person teams. Immediately, it became clear to me that the notion of 'best friend' would be a deeper, more serious, and quite possibly formalised relationship--perhaps even political at the upper end of the food chain. So then I imagined what that relationship might look like, and then I started hunting for an Old English (in my fiction I'm currently using the term 'Anglisc' but this may change) word to describe that relationship. And the only thing I could find was 'gemæcca', which according to Old English Made Easy means 'mate, equal, one of a pair, comrade, companion' and 'husband or wife'. It's proving to be a complicated but interesting concept.
Interesting word choice. I always wonder about these sorts of concepts and our anachronistic readings back onto them. How do concepts of polity apply? I especially wonder these things about the politics of the early medieval period. Of course, there were politics, and there were social systems, but they weren't as set and fast as they became in the High Middle Ages. So I often wonder about concepts like comitatus and the "bonds" between people. Of course there were strong bonds--as there are now--but did they label them? What, precisely, did a word like gemæcca mean in common vocabulary? What sort of companion, bond, etc. did it embody and signify? It's interesting that you've chosen for discussing such a bond as you describe, and for the name of this blog.
ReplyDeleteOn a linguistic note, I did a little looking in my OE dictionary and glossaries, and the word gemæcca is actually the masculine (weak) noun, while gemæcce is the feminine (weak) noun version--both meaning mate or companion--pronounced "ye-macha" or "ye-mache." Incidentally, it's the ancestor of our modern word "match."
Hey Nicola -
ReplyDeleteHave you listened to the Radio 4 "In Our Time" podcast on Hild? Might be fun for you ...
link:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/history/inourtime/inourtime_20070405.shtml
Oh, I think you have saved me from a serious pratfall :) Gemæcce it is.
ReplyDeleteRight now I'm seeing it as an informal but desperately necessary bond between ordinary women, and a political 'lady in waiting' kind of thing for royal/noble/with pretensions women. Except, of course, those modern terms don't mean a lot in the milieu I'm describing.
Jane, yes! That's the one with Rosemary Cramp and John Blair and Sarah Foot? It was wonderful. Melvyn Bragg does his usual great job of being all ingenuous and getting people to jump in (and jump at each other just a bit). I long to be able to take each and every one of those people out for a pint and just...chat.
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