Posted in Alternative Names, Baby Names, Druid Names, Heathen Names, Heathenism, Llewellyn's Complete Book of Names, Magical Names, Names, New Age Names, Pagan Names, Pagan-friendly, Paganism, Unisex Names, Unusual Names, Wiccan Names, Witch Names, tagged Aika, Amser, Anna, Annona, Berry, Calendula, Carme, Chakana, Chronos, Consus, Crop, Denbora, Ekin, Gather, Harvest, Hour, Idő, Jera, Jeran, Jeraz, Kausi, Mimela, Ona, Perenna, Pomona, Reap, Saison, Season, Sezona, Tara, Tími, Teamhair, Tempest, Tempo, Tempus, Time, Zaman, Zeit, Zymor on February 9, 2012 |
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Jera is one of those runes which features only in a couple of alphabets — the Elder Futhark and the Anglo-Frisian.
The runic alphabet shifts again with Jera, with what at first seems an inexplicable leap from the depths of winter to the other side of the wheel of the year and the harvest.
Or is it?
For after the hardship and difficulties of the last three runes, Hægl, Nyd and Is, Jera represents the fulfillment of hope, the rewards of perseverance against all the odds. With Jera, we reap what we have sown, and reminds us that all things have their season.
Change — for good, for bad — is inevitable. Enjoy the fruits of Jera while you can.
Literally, it means “year” and “harvest” — and carries the sense of “prosperity”. Interestingly, it is etymologyically related to the Slavic words for “the spring,” and the Greek for “hour.”
Jera itself certainly has fairly good name potential, Jeran possibly even more, while Jeraz offers that slightly more exotic edge. With its meanings and associations of prosperity, there are lots of other names in harmony with Jera, such as those I listed under Feoh, and Wynn.
And I’ve already covered some harvest-related names in my post on the Equinox.
Some other names, and name suggestions, which resonate with Jera:
- Aika — Finnish: “time”
- Amser — Welsh: “time.”
- Anna Perenna — Roman Goddess of plenty, who presides over the wheel of the year. Both this Anna and Perenna may have links to the Latin for “year”: annus. It also means “circuit.” Perenna is usually derived from perennis “through the year.”
- Annona — another Roman Goddess, who personified a year. Also from annus “year.”
- Berry
- Calendula — the botanical name for the English marigold. It acquired its name, from the Latin kalends, used of the first day of a month, because it has the ability to flower all year.
- Carme — Cretan Goddess of the Harvest
- Chakana — ancient Incan symbol of the Wheel of the Year.
- Chronos — the Greek God of time.
- Consus — Roman God of the harvest
- Crop
- Denbora – Basque: “time”
- Ekin — Turkish name: “harvest.”
- Gather
- Harvest
- Hour
- Idő — Hungarian: “time”
- Kausi — Finnish: “season”
- Mimela – Lakota: “to be round,” “to be circular.”
- Ona — Hebrew: “season”
- Pomona — Roman Goddess of fruit.
- Reap
- Saison — French, German: “season.”
- Season
- Sezona — Latvian: “season”
- Teamhair — Old Irish: “time,” “season”; this is the Irish name for Tara — Teamhair na Rí, and the name of the Goddess who presides over that place.
- Tempest – derives ultimately from Latin tempus “time.”
- Tempo
- Tempus — Latin: “time.”
- Time
- Tími — Icelandic: “time.”
- Tymor — Welsh: “season.”
- Zaman — Persian, Turkish: “time”
- Zeit — German: “time”
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Posted in Alternative Names, Baby Names, Druid Names, Heathen Names, Llewellyn's Complete Book of Names, Magical Names, Nature, New Age Names, Pagan Names, Pagan-friendly, Unusual Names, Wiccan Names, Witch Names, World Names, tagged Aëlla, Aëllo, Aëma, Aëtes, Anemone, Anemos, Angin, Aquilo, Asterope, Astrape, Audra, Awel, Bö, Blast, Blesk, Blizzard, Blow, Bluster, Blustery, Bolt, Boreas, Breshër, Breshëri, Broche, Bronte, Chimon, Chion, Chione, Chioni, Corwynt, Cyclone, Deluge, Dilyw, Edur, Eira, Elur, Erë, Eriole, Eső, Euri, Flamen, Flash, Flurry, Fulger, Fulgor, Fulgora, Fulgur, Fulmen, Fulmine, Furacán, Gale, Grad, Grando, Granizo, Grêle, Grom, Guntur, Gust, Gwynt, Hagalaz, Hagale, Hagall, Hagel, Hagl, Hail, Haize, Hayl, Hayle, Hæʒl, Hægl, Hóvihar, Helicias, Hurricane, Hyeteria, Hyetia, Hyetos, Hysma, Imber, Lailaps, Lauso, Löök, Lietus, Lightning, Lluvia, Lumi, Lyn, Molinya, Monsoon, Mvua, Neige, Nevasca, Neve, Nieve, Nimbus, Ningor, Nipha, Nivalis, Nix, Ombria, Ombros, Ondée, Orkan, Ouragan, Pagi, Petir, Pluie, Pluvia, Prahara, Prester, Procella, Radi, Rafale, Rafală, Raffica, Rage, Rain, Rainstorm, Rhagden, Rhyax, Sade, Salama, Sleet, Snežana, Snow, Snowstorm, Squall, Sterope, Storm, Stormy, Surge, Szél, Taran, Tempest, Tempesta, Thunder, Thunor, Thyella, Topan, Tornado, Torrent, Tourbillo, Trono, Trovão, Trumoi, Tuono, Tuule, Tuuli, Twister, Tximista, Tymestl, Typhoon, Umeme, Uragan, Vánice, Vihar, Villam, Viscol, Vējš, Vētra, Vėjas, Whirlwind, Wind, Xita, Zale on January 10, 2012 |
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Hægl is the ninth letter of the Runic Alphabet. As with others, its name varies depending on which Runic Alphabet is being used:
In all cases, it means “hail,” and the poems focus on its cold, hard nature, though the Old English one does offer a kind of hope when it points out that it melts away to water.
Every cloud has a silver lining, and all that.
Even today, hail can be devastatingly destructive; I can remember a storm in Lincolnshire about ten years ago when hailstones as big as golf-balls fell, smashing greenhouses and damaging cars.
But to people in the past, a bad hailstorm could destroy crops — and that might mean the difference between life and death. In one — sometimes brief — storm, people’s lives could be overturned.
Unsurprisingly, therefore, Hægl is a rune which symbolizes destruction, but the vicissitudes of fate, and of sudden, unavoidable change, and the raw power of nature. Coming after jolly old Wynn, it feels a bit like a bolt from the blue — and that’s deliberate.
Just when everything’s going well, life’s good — all it takes is something unexpected to happen, your world is turned upside down, and you’re left running for whatever cover you can find.
Hægl reminds us who is really boss — Mother Nature.
As a name, I think all the variants could work, as well as Hagel, the Modern German, Dutch and Swedish form, or Hagl, the Norwegian and Dutch. There’s also, of course, the plain English Hail, and its Middle English variants Hayl and Hayle.
There are also many other weather phenomena which share same wild, untamed, raw spirit of Nature:
- Blast
- Blizzard
- Blow
- Bluster
- Blustery
- Bolt
- Cyclone
- Deluge
- Flash
- Flurry
- Gale
- Gust
- Hurricane
- Lightning
- Monsoon
- Rain
- Rainstorm
- Sleet
- Snow
- Snowstorm
- Squall
- Storm
- Stormy
- Surge
- Tempest
- Thunder
- Tornado
- Torrent
- Twister
- Typhoon
- Whirlwind
- Wind
Many of these present interesting options in other languages:
- Aëlla — Greek: “stormy wind,” “whirlwind” (source of Aëllo, the name of a harpy)
- Aëma — Greek: “blast,” “wind”
- Aëtes — Greek: “blast,” “gale”
- Anemos — Greek: “wind” (source of Anemone, the “wind-flower”)
- Angin — Indonesian, Malay: “wind”
- Aquilo — Latin: “North Wind”
- Asterope, Sterope – Greek: “lightning”
- Astrape — Greek: “lightning”
- Audra – Lithuanian: “storm”
- Aura — Latin: “wind,” “blast,” “breeze”
- Awel — Welsh: “wind,” “breeze”
- Blesk — Czech: “lightning”
- Bö — German: “squall”
- Boreas — Greek: “North Wind”
- Breshër, Breshëri — Albanian: “hail”
- Broche – Greek: “rain”
- Bronte — Greek: “thunder”
- Chimon — Greek: “wintry weather,” “storm”
- Chion — Greek: “snow” (source of Chione, the name of a number of characters in Greek mythology)
- Chioni — Modern Greek: “snow”
- Corwynt – Welsh: “hurricane”
- Dilyw — Welsh: “deluge”
- Eira — Welsh: “snow”
- Elur, Edur — Basque: “snow”
- Erë — Albanian: “wind”
- Eriole – Greek: “hurricane,” “whirlwind”
- Eső — Hungarian: “rain”
- Euri — Basque: “rain”
- Flamen — Latin: “wind,” “gale,” “blast”
- Fulger — Romanian: “lightning”
- Fulgor, Fulgur – Latin: “lightning”
- Fulgora — Roman Goddess of lightning
- Fulmen – Latin: “lightning”
- Fulmine — Italian: “lightning”
- Furacán — Galician: “hurricane”
- Grad — Croatian, Polish, Russian: “hail”
- Grêle – French: “hail”
- Grando — Latin: “hail,” “hailstorm”
- Granizo — Portuguese, Spanish: “hail”
- Grom — Russian: “thunder”
- Guntur — Indonesian: “thunder”
- Gwynt — Welsh: “wind”
- Haize — Basque: “wind”
- Helicias — Greek: “forked lightning”
- Hóvihar — Hungarian: “blizzard”
- Hyeteria — Greek: “rainy weather”
- Hyetia — Greek: “rain”
- Hyetos — Greek: “rain”
- Hysma — Greek: “rain”
- Imber — Latin: “heavy rain”
- Lailaps — Greek: “hurricane,” “furious storm”
- Lauso — Basque: “sleet storm”
- Lietus — Latvian, Lithuanian: “rain”
- Lluvia — Spanish: “rain”
- Löök — Estonian: “blow”
- Lumi — Estonian, Finnish: “snow”
- Lyn — Danish, Norwegian: “lightning”
- Molinya — Russian: “lightning”
- Mvua — Swahili: “rain”
- Neige — French: “snow”
- Nevasca — Portuguese: “blizzard”
- Neve — Portuguese: “snow”
- Nieve — Spanish: “snow”
- Nimbus — Latin: “pouring rain”
- Ningor — Latin: “fall of snow”
- Nipha — Greek: “snow”
- Nivalis — Latin: “snowy”
- Nix — Latin: “snow”
- Ombria — Greek: “rain,” “rainy”
- Ombros — Greek: “heavy rain”
- Ondée — French: “heavy shower”O
- Orkan –Danish: “hurricane”
- Ouragan — French: “hurricane”
- Pagi — Estonian: “squall”
- Petir — Indonesia: “lightning”
- Pluie — French: “rain”
- Pluvia — Latin: “rain”
- Prahara — Indonesian: “tempest”
- Prester – Greek: “hurricane”
- Procella — Latin: “violent storm”
- Radi — Swahili: “thunder”
- Rafală — Romanian: “gust”
- Rafale — French: “flurry,” “squall,” “blast”
- Raffica — Italian: “gust,” “flurry”
- Rahe — Estonian: “hail”
- Rhagden – Greek: “in torrents”
- Rhyax – Greek: “torrent”
- Sade — Finnish: “rain”
- Salama — Finnish: “lightning”
- Snežana — Croation: “snowy”
- Szél — Hungarian: “wind”
- Taran — Welsh: “(peal) of thunder”
- Tempesta — Italian: “gale,” “tempest”
- Thunor – Old English: “thunder”
- Thyella — Greek: “gale,” “tempest”
- Topan — Indonesian: “typhoon”
- Tourbillon — French: “whirlwind”
- Trono — Galician: “thunder”
- Trovão — Portuguese: “thunder”
- Trumoi — Basque: “thunder”
- Tuono — Italian: “thunder”
- Tuule — Estonian: “wind”
- Tuuli — Finnish: “wind”
- Tximista — Basque: “lightning”
- Tymestl — Welsh: “storm,” “tempest”
- Umeme — Swahili: “lighning”
- Uragan — Albanian, Romanian: “hurricane”
- Vánice — Czech: “blizzard”
- Vėjas — Lithuanian: “wind”
- Vējš — Latvian: “wind”
- Vētra — Latvian: “storm”
- Vihar — Hungarian: “storm”
- Villám — Hungarian: “lightning”
- Viscol — Romanian: “blizzard”
- Xita — Maltese: “rain”
- Zale — Gree: “squall,” “storm,” “driving rain”
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