Disclaimer

Everything on this blog reflects my own ideas and opinions and either does not or else may not reflect those of my employer or any other organisation.



Saturday 31 October 2015

Happy Hallowe'en: But Did the Scots Poet Burns First coin the Word Halloween?


Happy Halloween
Today (31 October 2015) is Halloween. And so, from that cause, I deployed my Big Data ID method - which is, incidentally, the same method - see Sutton 2014    - that debunked Charles Darwin's self-serving lie that no naturalist had read Scottish horticulturist Patrick Matthew's (1831) prior published full hypothesis of 'the natural process of selection' before he replicated it 27 years later - to discover the first published use of the word Halloween.

The powerful ID method enables me to discover that what appears to be the earliest currently known printed origin of the word 'Halloween' - or more precisely 'Hallow E'en' - is 1724. Moreover, Robert Burns appears to have been first into print in 1786 with the word Halloween from the poem he penned of that name in 1785.

Prior knowledge

At the time of writing, Wikipedia and seemingly countless other websites vaguely have it that the earliest known usage of the word is "about  1745". The Online Etymology Dictionary makes the same conveniently vague claim, as does the mighty Chamber's Dictionary of Etymology.

Incidentally, the same Big Data ID method uniquely discovered that its founder Rober Chambers, author of the Vestiges of Creation, correspondent and associate of Darwin, had earlier read and then cited Matthew's (1831) book in 1832 (see Sutton 2104a)

Chambers Dictionary of Etymology (2012) p 462:

'Halloween or Hallowe'en about 1745, Scottish shortening of Allhallow-even'.

More precisely, the ID method enables is to pinpoint the first - to date - discoverable use of the word

 'Hallow E'en' to be 1724. on page 22 of  a book by Alan Ramsay entitled The Teatime Miscellany: 

Curiously we see from Ramsay's prose that there appears to have been an apparently well-known tune of the same name. Further research reveals this song was published n 1726. (More on Ramsay himself: here).

In 1786 we find what to date appears to be the earliest discoverable use of the unhyphenated word Halloween and it is by none other than the great Scottish poet:  Robert Burns (pp 101-102)


The book that re-wrote
the history of the discovery
 of natural selection
The trusty ID method strikes once again!

For more examples of the power of the new research method, check out the free to view Chapter Nullius In Verba: Darwin's greatest secret at Amazon books
Three - which is an A-Z of busted myths in my book

If you want to know the real origin of the Easter Bunnie? Here it is.




'