@VoxHiberionacum > adopted Romanitas in 5/6thC Dumnonia to me... On name, Padel seems fairly clear Cornish form is Ia/Ya, and the 'v' is >
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@VoxHiberionacum > whereas St Ive is Sancti Hyvon in 1258, Sancti Ivonis in 1291 and 1348-9 :)
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@caitlinrgreen There's two? jaysis! How would Ya have been pronounced at time? 'EE-YA', EE-AA, or EE-YA? -
@VoxHiberionacum lol, sorry, yes! Hence confusion and intrusive -v- in St Ives, one suspects. Apparently as in 'Leah'...
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@caitlinrgreen @VoxHiberionacum Among the myriad Cornish (and Irish?) saints are there others who might be connected via name to Byzantium? -
@SurreyMedieval @VoxHiberionacum Sounds like a poss research project, lol! ;) Hmm. Well, St Stinian in Dyfed is the name Justinian, tho v > -
@SurreyMedieval @VoxHiberionacum > late legends make him an insular 6thC Saint... And fear to mention that whilst Madron in Cornwall could > -
@SurreyMedieval @VoxHiberionacum > well be insular, St Matrona=signif church in Byzantine Constantinople just as St Ia was ;) ;) -
@caitlinrgreen@SurreyMedieval Ah HERE... ;) -
@VoxHiberionacum
@SurreyMedieval *looks confused, may need some more coffee*
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