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earln.![](/freq5.svg) Origin: A word inherited from Germanic. Etymology: Cognate with Old Saxon erl man, Old High German erl- (in personal names), Old Icelandic earl , jarl nobleman, warrior, leader (compare jarl n.), Norn (Shetland) iarl , Old Swedish iärl , iarl (early modern Swedish järl , jerl ), Old Danish ierl , jarl (Danish jarl ), probably < a suffixed form of the same Germanic base as Old Icelandic jara fight, battle, further etymology uncertain (perhaps related to the Germanic base of Old Icelandic ern brisk, vigorous: see earnest n.1); compare also (with different forms of the suffix) Early Runic erilaR man of high status, (perhaps) rune-master, and post-classical Latin Eruli (also Heruli), Byzantine Greek Ἔρουλοι, the name of an East Germanic tribe (3rd cent.)Notes on forms. The β. forms show development of a palatal on-glide. The γ. forms show development of an epenthetic vowel between r and l . The δ. forms show both of these features. Notes on specific senses. In sense 2 apparently originally showing a semantic loan from the early Scandinavian cognate. The semantic development of the word and the political implications of its use in late Anglo-Saxon England have been much discussed. For a recent summary and further discussion see S. M. Pons-Sanz Lexical Effects Anglo-Scand. Ling. Contact on Old Eng. (2013) 80–1, 213–15. In sense 3 after senses of classical Latin comes (chiefly post-classical uses) and Anglo-Norman and Old French conte count n.2, e.g. in quot. OE at sense 3a with reference to the Count of Flanders (Old French Conte de Flandre ), in quots. lOE2, c1300 at sense 3a to the Count of Anjou (Old French Conte d'Ango ), etc.; compare also:1258 Proclam. Henry III in Trans. Philol. Soc. (1868–9) 18 Henri par la grace deu Rey de Engleterre, Sire de Irlande, Duc de Normandie de Aquiten et Cunte de Angou [Eng. Henri þurȝ godes fultume king on Engleneloande, Lhoauerd on Yrloande, Duk on Normandie on Aquitaine and eorl on Aniow]. Sense 3b in particular reflects changes in the composition of the English aristocracy after the Norman Conquest. For a discussion of the development of the rank and office of earl in the period from 1000 to 1300 in their historical context, especially in comparison to the originally continental rank of count, see D. Crouch Image of Aristocracy in Brit. (1992) 32-62. 1. society > society and the community > social class > nobility > [noun] > noble person or man eOE (Corpus Cambr. 173) iv. §2. 50 Swa we eac settað be eallum hadum, ge ceorle ge eorle. OE (2011) 95 Dux, heretoga uel heorl. OE (1942) 132 Eode swa anræd eorl to þam ceorle, ægþer hyra oðrum yfeles hogode. OE (Corpus Cambr.) i. 456 Hwilum wæs, þæt leod & lagu for be geþingðum; & þa wæron þeodwitan wurðscipes wurðe, ælc be his mæðe, ge eorl ge ceorl, ge þegen ge þeoden. lOE (Rochester) xiii. 4 Gif on eorles tune man mannan ofslæhþ, xii scillinga gebete. 1614 J. Selden 268 An old Fragment thus: The wisest of the people were..worship worthy euery one in his rank,..Earle, Churl, Thane, and Underthane. 1878 VIII. 274/2 Each man, earl or churl, held his place strictly as a member of the community, bound by its laws, and owing to it his duties in war and in peace. 1928 R. W. Chambers in J. A. Hammerton IV. xciii. 2454/1 Suppose the earl's son kills the churl's son. It is a serious matter. a1991 N. Frye Rencontre in (2002) X. i. i. 72 The direction of one's mythological outlook at that period would depend on whether one was an earl or a churl, whether one was a member of the warrior aristocracy or of the small farmer or peasant class. society > armed hostility > warrior > [noun] OE Cynewulf 546 Hwite cwoman eorla eadgiefan englas togeanes. OE 7 Ealra wæron fife eorla ond idesa insittendra. OE (2008) 357 Þær Hroðgar sæt..mid his eorla gedriht. society > authority > rule or government > ruler or governor > sovereign ruler or monarch > king > [noun] > underking > Norse or Danish OE (Tiber. B.i) anno 1030 Her wæs Olaf cing ofslagen on Norwegon of his agenum folce, & wæs syððan halig; & þæs geres ær ðam forferde Hacun se dohtiga eorl on sæ. OE Charter: Earl Leofric & his Wife Godgifu to St Mary's Church, Worcester (Sawyer 1232) in A. J. Robertson (1956) 210 Leofric eorl & his gebedda habbað geunnen twa land for Godes lufan..into þære halgan stowe sancta Marian mynstre. lOE (Laud) anno 1048 Mann sette þa Oddan to eorle ofer Defenascire & ofer Sumersæton. c1325 (c1300) (Calig.) l. 6530 A gret erl of þis lond, godwine was is name. c1400 (Rawl. B. 171) 125 (MED) Þe Erl Godwyne, þat þo was þe grettest lorde of al Engeland next þe kyng. 1543 ( (1812) 233 (MED) The earle Tosty then of Northumberlande, That brother was vnto the kyng Herolde. 1587 R. Holinshed et al. Hist. Eng. (new ed.) viii. viii. 196/1 (heading) in (new ed.) I Harold the sonne of earle Goodwine crowned, proclaimed, and consecrated king; his subtill and adulatorie meanes to win the peoples fauour. 1612 S. Daniel i. 62 Braue deedes in the North, as Harold, Earle of Westsex, the sonne of the Earle Godwyn performed against the welsh in the west. 1659 W. Prynne 275 Prince Edward was called out of Normandy, and elected King, principally by the help and counsel of Earle Godwin. 1706 J. Hughes in I. 96/2 Godwin sought to greaten himself by the Conquest of Wales..; which his Son Harold, Earl of the West-Saxons, effected, by vanquishing the two Welsh kings, Ris and Griffith. 1761 D. Hume I. iii. 72 Canute..created Thurkill earl or duke of East Anglia. 1867 E. A. Freeman I. vi. 470 Cnut..appointed Earls over Northumberland, Mercia, and East-Anglia. 1995 B. Yorke vii. 316 The revenue from the towns was split, with two-thirds going to the king and one-third to the earl. 3. After the Norman Conquest, a title more generally regarded as equivalent to Latin comes (see count n.2). society > society and the community > social class > nobility > rank > earl, count, or countess > [noun] > earl or count > feudal OE (Tiber. B.iv) anno 1071 Baldawine eorl [of Flanders] forðferde, & Arnulf his sunu feng to þan rice. lOE (Laud) anno 1101 Þa..wurdon þa heafodmen her on lande wiðerræden togeanes þam cynge..þurh þone eorl Rodbert of Normandig þe mid unfriðe hider to lande fundode. lOE (Laud) (Peterborough contin.) anno 1124 Se ilce Willelm hefde numen Fulkes eorles gingre dohter to wife of Angeow, & forði se king of France & ealle þas eorles heolden mid him. c1175 (Burchfield transcript) l. 3989 Tatt enngell nohht ne comm. Till kingess. ne till eorless. a1200 (?c1175) Poema Morale (Trin. Cambr.) 324 in R. Morris (1873) 2nd Ser. 230 We mihten habben more an heuene þa[n] ȝierles and kinges. c1300 (Harl. 2277) (1845) l. 509 Sire Conan Eorl of Bretaigne: and the Eorl John of Angeo... And Eorl Williem of Ferers. a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden (St. John's Cambr.) (1876) VI. 251 Rouland eorl of þe paleys [L. comes palatii]. a1400 (a1325) (Vesp.) l. 13270 Noght o riche kinges kin, Ne of erel þan gret baron. (Harl. 221) 141 Erle, lorde, comes. a1450 (Faust.) (1883) l. 1078 Duke, Errelle & eke Barone. ?c1450 (?a1400) J. Wyclif (1880) 386 Dukis & erlis, barons & knyȝtis. 1484 W. Caxton tr. G. de la Tour-Landry (1971) lvi. 82 The sone of an erle of that Countre. c1540 (?a1400) (2002) f. 63v Ascalaphus a skathil duke..And Helinus a hede vrle hadyn to gedur Thretty shippes. 1589 R. Hakluyt i. 19 Thus by the imprudent and foolish hardines of that French Earle [sc. Robert, Count of Artois], the Frenchmen were discomfited. 1627 G. Richardson ii. 63 Henry the second, son to Geffrey Plantaginet Earle of Aniou in France, & Maude the Empresse. 1799 H. Hunter tr. J.-H. B. de Saint-Pierre (ed. 2) I. 354 Christianity..wrested in France enormous possessions out of the hands of the Earls and Barons. society > society and the community > social class > nobility > rank > earl, count, or countess > [noun] > earl or count OE Royal Charter: William I to Archbishops, Bishops, & Others, supporting Rights of Abbot Baldwin in D. C. Douglas (1932) 53 Þa witan,..Thomas arcebiscop of Eoferwic & Odo biscop of Baius min broþor & eorl ofer Cent [L. comes Cantie] & maniga oðra biscopas..& eorlas & ealle þa heafodmenn ures rices. lOE (Laud) anno 1094 Wið sum þæra dæle gefeaht Hugo eorl of Scrobscire & hi aflymde. ?a1160 (Laud) (Peterborough contin.) anno 1140 On þis gær wolde þe king Stephne tæcen Rodbert eorl of Gloucestre. c1325 (c1300) (Calig.) 10723 (MED) Þe king..bileuede þe erl marschal & þe erl of chestre þere. 1489 (a1380) J. Barbour (Adv.) ii. 234 Twa erlis alsua with him war. a1500 (1839) 1 Lorde Stafforde was made Erle of Devynschire. 1556 in J. G. Nichols 54 Sir John Dudley that was amrelle of the see was made yerle of Warwyk. c1600 (1875) I. 41 Moste of the Kings Councell, as erles, lordes and nobles of this realme. a1616 W. Shakespeare (1623) ii. ii. 78 The Earle of Warwick Shall one day make the Duke of Yorke a King. View more context for this quotation 1703 II. viii. 471 Lord Digby..should find the best way to make the Earl of Antrim to communicate the Affair to him, and to wish his Assistance. 1768 W. Blackstone I. i. xii. 310 An earl is a title of nobility. 1816 W. Scott Old Mortality xiii, in 1st Ser. IV. 283 Levied an armed regiment under the Yearl of Angus. 1878 Nov. 296/1 After Lord Eldon's retirement no Lord Chancellor was made an earl until Lord Cottenham's promotion on his retirement in 1850. 1937 3 May 77/3 When his father the Admiral died last year, David Beatty became Earl Beatty. 2011 (Nexis) 29 Apr. 4 William also became the Earl of Strathearn and received the title of Baron Carrickfergus. a1460 (Pembr. Cambr. 243) l. 1545 (MED) Aftir that, the Duke & Erlys have The pretory, a grounde out set therfore. 1573 T. Twyne tr. H. Llwyd f. 12 Sextus Rufus. in his booke de Notitia Prouinciarum, of the knowledge of Prouinces: speaketh of the Earle of the Saxon shoare, alonge both the Britaynes. 1577 R. Holinshed Hist. Eng. 103/2 in I Nectaridus one of the Emperoures house Earle of the Sea coast hauyng charge of the partyes towardes the Sea, was slayne. 1611 J. Speed vii. iii. 286/2 In Britaine an Office of Charge was instituted to defend the Coasts from their irruptions, the Captaine whereof was commonly called the Count or Earle of the Saxon Shoare. 1671 F. Philipps xv. 419 Earls..were accompted by the Civil Law to be as the Emperors more especial Servants or Domesticks. 1704 W. Atwood vi. 59 The old Romans..had a Comes Littoris Saxonici, an Earl of the Saxon Shoar. society > society and the community > social class > nobility > [noun] > noble person or man > of other foreign countries 1585 tr. 27 Foure or fiue horsemen..(of the which number was Fraunces of Portugall Erle of Vimioso). 1632 W. Lithgow (1682) x. 460 (margin) A single Combat between a Spanish Earl and a Scottish Traveller. 1709 A. Hill xviii. 142 A very rich and noble Earl, extreamly favour'd by the Græcian Emperor. 1893 Dec. 586 An English lord..and a Japanese earl..took their seats in silent sadness. 1904 F. Brinkley (new ed.) XII. App. 260 After the end of the rebellion Li was made an Earl, and in 1867 he became Viceroy of Hu-Kuang. 1995 S. Redo in M. C. Bassiouni 131 On 22 September 1830 the Hungarian earl Istvan Szechenyi wrote in his diary ‘Only there [etc.]’. society > authority > control > person in control > [noun] > superintendent 1483 W. Caxton tr. J. de Voragine f. ccclxxxij/1 Thenne the erle of the sacrefyses gaue moche money. Phrases 1817 May 161/1 This bold rebel was..the immediate successor of another doughty chief, usually known by the appropriate title of the Earl of Hell. 1893 D. MacNicol 148 Here entereth Tibby Flounderfeet, with face as black as the Earl of Hell's waistcoat, bearing a string of fresh herring. 1958 J. Kesson v. 68 Come here till I give your face a dicht. It always gets as black as the Earl of Hell's waistcoat. 1993 (Nexis) 23 Sept. 14 She roughly rearranged the tousled ginger carpet above a face as filthy as the Earl of Hell's waistcoat. 2006 C. Ferguson 22 I won't discuss Jesus with you, Margaret... You are in the employ of the Earl of Hell. Compounds society > society and the community > social class > nobility > rank > earl, count, or countess > [noun] > margrave society > authority > rule or government > ruler or governor > sovereign ruler or monarch > other independent rulers > [noun] > landgrave, margrave, or wildgrave 1630 in tr. G. Botero (rev. ed.) 402 Saros Patak, where the Palatine or Earle-marcher of that part of Hungaria..usually keeps his residence. a1871 T. Greenwood (1872) VI. xiv. v. 205 The deadly enmity of the earl marcher Roger Mortimer had driven Gilbert de Clare from the court. 2007 H. James in J. W. Evans & J. M. Wooding iii. 61 The Norman Earls Marcher and their knights reshaped the landscape. lOE (Rochester) v. 458 Gif þegen geþeah, þæt he wearð to eorle, þonne wæs he syððan eorlrihtes weorðe [L. (Quadripartitus) dignus rectitudine comitis et honore]. 1875 W. Stubbs (ed. 2) I. v. 80 The..man who has ‘thriven to eorl-right’, or who has his forty hides.] This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2015; most recently modified version published online March 2022). † earlv.1Origin: Perhaps formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: earl n. Etymology: Perhaps < earl n. Obsolete. society > authority > rule or government > rule or govern [verb (transitive)] c1450 (?a1400) (Ashm.) l. 4646 Alexander, þat aire þat erles all þe werd. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2015; most recently modified version published online December 2021). earlv.2![](/freq3.svg) Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: arles n. Etymology: < arles n. (compare forms at that entry). Compare later arle v. Scottish. Now rare. society > occupation and work > working > labour supply > [verb (transitive)] > hire or employ > employ by part payment in advance c1480 (a1400) St. Agnes l. 26 in W. M. Metcalfe (1896) II. 347 In takine of weding He erlis þaim with his ryng. 1496 in T. Dickson (1877) I. 276 To by arras bedis to the King, and erl tymmyr and bedding that ȝeid to Striuelin. 1535 in (2007) 1535/35 Under the pane of..escheting of all sik gudis cost or erlit be thame. 1708 in W. Mure (1854) I. 211 She was recommended here by a physician, a very honest man,..and I errled her. a1810 R. Tannahill (1815) 163 The heav'nly vow I got, That e'rled her my own. 1881 A. Wardrop 80 Ne'er lend your aid to what has hurled, Sae mony tae anither world, Wha ance unconsciously were earled In some drink den. 1928 L. McInnes in (1931) I. 73/2 [Argyll] Ah wuz erld tae her. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2015; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < |