Sunday, 13 July 2025

Legend

It is quite unusual to find a word with two quite different meanings when it is not a mono-syllabic or simplistic word. Legend is one such word and, in order to discover why, we will look at the etymologies.

Most often we see ‘legend’ used as a synonym for myth or folklore; but it is also used to describe a title or banner.


First coming to English in the early 14th century it referred to ‘a narrative dealing with an event.’ This came from Old French legend, itself from Medieval Latin legenda, most often these stories would have been those related to saints and would have been read in religious places.

These religious readings saw the use tweaked a little and the meaning seen as ‘things to be read’. Such reflects the root of Proto-Indo-European leg ‘to collect, gather’ and later ‘to pick out words’.


This then leads to the other meaning of ‘writing or inscription’, which has been seen since the 1610s when referring to the wording on maps – such as those produced by John Speed.


No change or developments for centuries until, around 1958, the phrase ‘legend in one’s own time’ (and variations on same) appears.

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