Jomfruland, Jungfrun, Landegode og Godøya på Sunnmøre – ikkje farlege, men reine og gode?

This article presents new explanations for the following names: Godøya in Sunnmøre, Western Norway; Jomfruland on the Norwegian Skagerrak coast, Jungfrun in Kalmarsund, Sweden; and Landegode, which has been used about three separate Norwegian islands: the mentioned Jomfruland; Svinøya north of Stad,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Heide, Eldar
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Norwegian Nynorsk
Published: Novus forlag 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2670683
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spelling fthsvestlandet:oai:hvlopen.brage.unit.no:11250/2670683 2024-03-03T08:43:18+00:00 Jomfruland, Jungfrun, Landegode og Godøya på Sunnmøre – ikkje farlege, men reine og gode? Heide, Eldar Norway 2019 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2670683 nno nno Novus forlag Heide, E. (2019). Jomfruland, jungfrun, landegode og godøya på sunnmøre – ikkje farlege, men reine og gode? Namn og nemne, 36, 47-78. urn:issn:0800-4684 https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2670683 cristin:1788113 Navngivelse-DelPåSammeVilkår 4.0 Internasjonal http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/deed.no © 2019 forfatteren 47-78 36 Namn og Nemne : Tidsskrift for norsk namnegransking Peer reviewed Journal article 2019 fthsvestlandet 2024-02-02T12:41:00Z This article presents new explanations for the following names: Godøya in Sunnmøre, Western Norway; Jomfruland on the Norwegian Skagerrak coast, Jungfrun in Kalmarsund, Sweden; and Landegode, which has been used about three separate Norwegian islands: the mentioned Jomfruland; Svinøya north of Stad, Western Norway; and Landegode near Bodø, Northern Norway. The traditional explanation is that the three Landegode islands together with Jungfrun are particularly dangerous places within the coastal waters and that the names are placating names that were used in order to appease the powers thought to reside there and let sailors pass without any trouble. However, the claim that these islands are dangerous places does not stand up to scrutiny. What distinguishes them, together with the island of Godøya in Sunnmøre, is quite the contrary: They are natural navigation marks surrounded by clear waters, free of skerries and reefs, so that sailors are able to steer towards them in order to avoid any sub-surface dangers. This must have been invaluable in times before sea charts, compass and more advanced navigational aids. My suggestion therefore is that the name Landegode, ‘the good land’, is to be understood literally: The three Landegode islands are places that are good, in the sense of helpful, for sailors. The name Godøya in Sunnmøre, derived from Guðey ‘god-island’, is, I believe, to be understood in a similar way – the difference being that, here, the easy approach from the sea was considered so useful that it was linked to the gods. Regarding Jomfruland ‘Virgin-Land’ and Jungfrun ‘The Virgin’, my suggestion is that a wordplay is at issue: These islands are either flanked or surrounded by clear waters, which in Norwegian and Swedish is expressed as ‘clean waters’, while virgins were said to be ‘clean’ in former times. publishedVersion Article in Journal/Newspaper Bodø Bodø Northern Norway Høgskulen på Vestlandet: HVL Open Norway Bodø ENVELOPE(14.405,14.405,67.280,67.280) Reine ENVELOPE(13.090,13.090,67.932,67.932) Svinøya ENVELOPE(7.139,7.139,62.834,62.834) Landegode ENVELOPE(14.371,14.371,67.437,67.437) Godøya ENVELOPE(14.692,14.692,67.236,67.236)
institution Open Polar
collection Høgskulen på Vestlandet: HVL Open
op_collection_id fthsvestlandet
language Norwegian Nynorsk
description This article presents new explanations for the following names: Godøya in Sunnmøre, Western Norway; Jomfruland on the Norwegian Skagerrak coast, Jungfrun in Kalmarsund, Sweden; and Landegode, which has been used about three separate Norwegian islands: the mentioned Jomfruland; Svinøya north of Stad, Western Norway; and Landegode near Bodø, Northern Norway. The traditional explanation is that the three Landegode islands together with Jungfrun are particularly dangerous places within the coastal waters and that the names are placating names that were used in order to appease the powers thought to reside there and let sailors pass without any trouble. However, the claim that these islands are dangerous places does not stand up to scrutiny. What distinguishes them, together with the island of Godøya in Sunnmøre, is quite the contrary: They are natural navigation marks surrounded by clear waters, free of skerries and reefs, so that sailors are able to steer towards them in order to avoid any sub-surface dangers. This must have been invaluable in times before sea charts, compass and more advanced navigational aids. My suggestion therefore is that the name Landegode, ‘the good land’, is to be understood literally: The three Landegode islands are places that are good, in the sense of helpful, for sailors. The name Godøya in Sunnmøre, derived from Guðey ‘god-island’, is, I believe, to be understood in a similar way – the difference being that, here, the easy approach from the sea was considered so useful that it was linked to the gods. Regarding Jomfruland ‘Virgin-Land’ and Jungfrun ‘The Virgin’, my suggestion is that a wordplay is at issue: These islands are either flanked or surrounded by clear waters, which in Norwegian and Swedish is expressed as ‘clean waters’, while virgins were said to be ‘clean’ in former times. publishedVersion
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Heide, Eldar
spellingShingle Heide, Eldar
Jomfruland, Jungfrun, Landegode og Godøya på Sunnmøre – ikkje farlege, men reine og gode?
author_facet Heide, Eldar
author_sort Heide, Eldar
title Jomfruland, Jungfrun, Landegode og Godøya på Sunnmøre – ikkje farlege, men reine og gode?
title_short Jomfruland, Jungfrun, Landegode og Godøya på Sunnmøre – ikkje farlege, men reine og gode?
title_full Jomfruland, Jungfrun, Landegode og Godøya på Sunnmøre – ikkje farlege, men reine og gode?
title_fullStr Jomfruland, Jungfrun, Landegode og Godøya på Sunnmøre – ikkje farlege, men reine og gode?
title_full_unstemmed Jomfruland, Jungfrun, Landegode og Godøya på Sunnmøre – ikkje farlege, men reine og gode?
title_sort jomfruland, jungfrun, landegode og godøya på sunnmøre – ikkje farlege, men reine og gode?
publisher Novus forlag
publishDate 2019
url https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2670683
op_coverage Norway
long_lat ENVELOPE(14.405,14.405,67.280,67.280)
ENVELOPE(13.090,13.090,67.932,67.932)
ENVELOPE(7.139,7.139,62.834,62.834)
ENVELOPE(14.371,14.371,67.437,67.437)
ENVELOPE(14.692,14.692,67.236,67.236)
geographic Norway
Bodø
Reine
Svinøya
Landegode
Godøya
geographic_facet Norway
Bodø
Reine
Svinøya
Landegode
Godøya
genre Bodø
Bodø
Northern Norway
genre_facet Bodø
Bodø
Northern Norway
op_source 47-78
36
Namn og Nemne : Tidsskrift for norsk namnegransking
op_relation Heide, E. (2019). Jomfruland, jungfrun, landegode og godøya på sunnmøre – ikkje farlege, men reine og gode? Namn og nemne, 36, 47-78.
urn:issn:0800-4684
https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2670683
cristin:1788113
op_rights Navngivelse-DelPåSammeVilkår 4.0 Internasjonal
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/deed.no
© 2019 forfatteren
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