ring-hall
English
Etymology
Calque of Old English hringsele, from hring (“ring”) + sele (“hall”).
Noun
ring-hall (plural ring-halls)
- (kenning, literary) An Anglo-Saxon mead hall.
- 1843, J.M. Kemble, The Poetry of the Codex Vercellensis, London: Æfric Society, page 96:
- the joy of halls to the men
and hoarded treasure,
the bright ring-halls,
and for himself a ship
on the sea-shore
would seek.
- 1983, Constance Hieatt, Beowulf and Other Old English Poems, New York: Bantam, page 34:
- Heorot is cleansed, the bright ringhall[.]
- 1999, Seamus Heaney, Beowulf, London: Faber and Faber, page 64:
- When I first landed
I proceeded to the ring-hall and saluted Hrothgar.
- 2011, Alvin A. Lee, Gold-Hall and Earth-Dragon, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, page 165:
- In the midst of this imago mundi, in this enclosing and protecting ring-hall of the people favoured by God and their king, is situated the gift-throne from which the lord of the rings circulates treasures among the dryht men.