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 Ah! Kristin!!! 
    This is great!  Awaiting 
any Møre information you can come up with especially if it deals with 
900-1000 AD.  Any information on changing the ø to oe or ae.  I 
used to work in the Registration card Dept. of a software company.  When we 
got orders from Norway, we were advised to use the oe for our database 
records.  Was that wrong?  What do each of these sound like: Ø 
Æ  Å  ?  I have seen the Æ 
used at the beginning of 
Saxon names such as Æthelred the unready.  Were the early Saxons when 
they were over in N. Germany next to Denmark (I think) part of the same 
linguistic family?  I am told that you can't do this in Finland even though 
they adopted Swedish characters.  Because if you were to change to oe etc. 
it would make a whole different word.  I bet a lot of stuff I have picked 
up along the way is totally wrong.   
  
    I'm also interested in the 
name of Møre because I have a line of ancestors named Morey.  There 
were at least 3 families of Morys that arrived in RI around 1630.  One 
Roger Morey was probably the cousin of Roger Williams who founded RI.  
There is a man in New Zealand who just today reported that he has over 21,900 
Morey/Mawry,etc. names in his data base.  You can't imagine all the 
variations there are on this name even to Mohrjie (I think) in The 
Netherlands.  My theory is that Vikings from that district of Norway 
carried that name to many many places and it was then spelled as the people of 
that area would have spelled it.  And consider the name of Murray.  
Maybe my ancestor was really a Murray but it was recorded as Morey by an 
Englishman as was done in the case of John Sinclair/Sinkler of 
Exeter. 
  
    The NZ man thinks most of the 
names come from the latin root of Mauritus (again, I guess at the spelling) but 
it meant dark or swarthy and he says it was given to the Moors into Spain.  
Probably both ideas have merit.  I think it is interesting that he lives 
there among the Maori of New Zealand. The Japanese also have the name of Mori to 
add to the confusion. 
    While I'm on the RI 
subject.  At the 600th gathering, I wrongly corrected Pete Cummings when he 
mentioned Benedict Arnold as a governor of RI.  Benedict Arnold II was the 
second governor and followed Roger Williams.  The Benedict Arnold we are 
familiar with was B. Arnold V.  I decided to read this book on Benedict 
Arnold that I've had for a year, before I read Saratoga.  I'm guessing that 
the author James Kirby Martin may be related on my Martin side 
also. 
    As you can tell, by these 
long messages, I have far too much time on my hands as I recover from 
larangitis.  I should be down at a certain bank today picketing them 
because they loaned money to  Castle Superstores that is trying to set up a 
porn shop very close to several schools.  The people in Oregon are so 
paranoid about losing their freedom of speech that they have the most lenient 
laws in the whole country which allow this sort of garbage to come in when the 
rest of you have had the good sense to make laws to protect your neighborhoods 
trusting that the U.S. Constitution will always protect you.  So these type 
of stores cater also to people flying in from other countries and states to load 
up on trash. 
    I guess that about covers 
things.--Anyone know whether there is a CD with an unabridged dictionary on 
it?  This is for looking up those obscure words, certainly not to help my 
spelling, there's no hope for that. 
Laurel 
    Laurel: 
    Once again - a fountain of information. What are you? A walking 
    encyclopedia? 
     Anyway, as it happens, I lived for over 10 years in Norway where I worked 
    and earned my BA in the History of Ideas (University of Oslo). I speak, read 
    and write fluent Norwegian. When I first moved there, I lived in a small 
    village (I seem to have a thing for small villages, I now live in a small 
    village in the Galilee) called "Grimo" in the Hardanger district. 
    I also had a "bunad", one of the folk costumes you mentioned, from 
    that region and they are very beautiful indeed. It was custom tailored and 
    complete with silver broach and black, silver buckle shoes. They are 
    somewhat different from the Møre og Romsdal bunads, but still 
    extremely eye-catching. ("og" by the way, means "and") 
     As far as not finding Møre on the map - and I'm not positive about 
    this - it may be because of the fact that these districts were often named 
    after certain people or families and it is not always the case that there 
    will be a corresponding town with the same name in the same district or 
    otherwise. It is like there is Oregon, but you don't have a town in Oregon 
    (so far as I know) named Oregon, i.e. Oregon, Oregon. I don't know. There 
    very well could be a town called Møre, but I've yet to find it. I 
    have a Norwegian friend of mine looking into it for me and if she can't come 
    up with anything, I can ask other Norwegians I know for information. I did 
    an internet search last night, but didn't come up with anything helpful in 
    this regard. 
     Anyway, that's all I have time to write for the moment. I've got to get 
    back to work. I am translating a book by a Norwegian author into English as 
    it happens. 
     Best always, 
     Kristin Alynn Hussein  Taurus International Word Processing Service 
     URL:  http://www.angelfire.com/mt/tauruswordprocessing/tauruswp.html 
    
     ********************* 
     Spirit One Email wrote: 
      First of 
        all, it would surely be great if we could have a real live member of our 
        discussion group from Møre, Norway.  They could probably add 
        much and correct much that I am about to give to 
        you.     A few months back I noticed a beautiful 
        silver broach on a friend's dress and was told that it was from her 
        native area of Norway.  So I told her that our Sinclairs/St. 
        Clairs' ancestor was Rollo s/o Rogenvald of Møre, Romsdal.  
        She loaned me some books on the folk costumes (Bunads) of Norway in 
        which I found the first good map.  Get out an atlas now and look at 
        Norway--mine just shows Norway.  I wonder whether the Vikings 
        realized that their country would someday look something like a dragon's 
        head or the prow of their ships?     Do you see that there is a long neck running 
        North to South.  Down 2/3 of the way it bulges out into a longish 
        oval like bulge.  Just at this point of getting large--where a 
        necklace would hang, there is a large fiord coming in from the west with 
        a branch even going upwards.  Keep going down the coast which is 
        now sloping SW  a bit and you will see another large fiord.  
        This fiord cuts right into the center of Møre og Romsdal (does og 
        mean "of " or "and"?)  This district is shaped 
        like a flattened heart with that large fiord the top inward thrust of 
        the heart design.  I can find Romsdal on other maps but never 
        Møre.  Why is that?  What does it signify that it isn't 
        on a map?     The book Sinclairs Family in  by 
        Morrison pg 21 says "Rogenwald, Earl of Maere (since the English 
        typewriter can't accomodate Ø, it is necessary to express it by 
        using "ae" only I really thought it should be 
        "oe".  Anyone know for sure?---)    and 
        Ruamdahl in Norway, considering Rogenwald as the 1st generation, and so 
        marked.    He was surnamed "the Rich" and was a 
        great favorite of King Harold, called "Fairhair," ruler of 
        Scandinavia.  (is that exactly correct? Was all of Scandinavia 
        united this early, or did he just have the biggest territory, live the 
        longest, and more active to be noticed by semi-historians? Remember 
        Finland is not Scandinavian.  Do you know the Finns came from way 
        over east of the bend in the Volga and their language is 
        Finno-Ugrian.  This makes them related to the Huns, Hungarians, 
        Turks, and Estonians.  And many of us have quite dark hair.  I 
        am 1/2 Finn.  The blond Finns probably reflect a Swedish 
        ancestry.   So they had no linguistic connection to Danish, 
        Swedish nor Norwegian.  Finland has never had a king except later 
        when Sweden or Russia was in charge)"His (Rogenvald) wife was a near 
        relative of the king.  In 888 he received a grant of the Orkney 
        Islands, and his son, Eynär became a permanent prince there, and 
        which his descendants ruled for five centuries." (this letter 
        "ä" seems to be a Swedish letter and not Norweigen.  
        Did Morrison get mixed up or did he want to use the æ but 
        couldn't?  Or perhaps Eynär is a Swedish name.  Any 
        linguists out there?  I know that at a very early time, it was hard 
        to distinuish between people from these three countries because many 
        times they had the same ruler.     Back to the Folk 
        costumes.  They are gorgeous but I was sad to find out that what I 
        saw in these books and what we see in the media only reflect costumes 
        developed from faded swatches and rememberances of people around 
        1900.  It reminds me that the tartans worn today that are 
        associated with a particular clan, would have been foreign to Prince 
        Henry and even to John of Exeter who arrived here around 
        1650.    
        "The early Tartans were associated with a particular district 
        -World Book Encyclopedia" ---(which could also mean with a 
        particular family maybe, since families had their territory that they 
        were identified with??) but it might also mean that when you moved away 
        from your ancestrial territory to elsewhere in Scotland, that it would 
        be expected that you would then wear the tartan of the new 
        district.    "Later they were used to identify the 
        chief clan or family of an arrea.  Extra lines were added to some 
        designs to show the wearer's rank."  But then maybe people 
        didn't do much moving??    I bet that these questions would have been 
        covered in the Tartan Symposium at the NH Highland games, right?  
        I'm struggling with this tartan concept.  But I can't read another 
        book--I have 19 of them waiting for me right now!  Just finished 
        "Using Microsoft Windows 98" now isn't that 
        thrilling.Laurel    
 
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