Subject: Well, perhaps we can construct one, then.
Author:
Posted on: 2022-12-06 08:58:34 UTC

The bedrock of German village names seems to be the same as English ones - a lot of them are named after features of human geography. Oxford (a ford for oxen), Cambridge (a bridge over the river Cam), and Birmingham (the home - ham - of Beorma's people, the Beormings) are good examples of these.

You've got a castle and a forest. I could easily form *Waldburg (forest-fort) from that - but Waldburg is an actual city, and a county of the Holy Roman Empire to boot! How about Wälderburg? I've simply used the plural for "forests", which appears in a couple of place-names, but the actual compound doesn't seem to exist. -burg actually means "fortified place", so this would imply the castle was the original settlement, with the village growing up afterwards.

Failing that: how was your village founded, 700 years before the story takes place? Is it a river crossing? Was it a farm with a specific animal or crop? Was it a deliberate resettlement? If your nobles are particularly obnoxious, they might have renamed it after themselves (there's a lot of "King's X" towns dotted around England that suffered this fate). I can probably put something together, but I need something to work from. :)

hS

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