Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Note to the Reader
- INTRODUCTION
- THE ETYMOLOGIES
- Analytical table of contents
- Book I Grammar (De grammatica)
- Book II Rhetoric and dialectic (De rhetorica et dialectica)
- Book III Mathematics (De mathematica)
- Book IV Medicine (De medicina)
- Book V Laws and times (De legibus et temporibus)
- Book VI Books and ecclesiastical offices (De libris et officiis ecclesiasticis)
- Book VII God, angels, and saints (De deo, angelis et sanctis)
- Book VIII The church and sects (De ecclesia et sectis)
- Book IX Languages, nations, reigns, the military, citizens, family relationships (De linguis, gentibus, regnis, militia, civibus, affinitatibus)
- Book X Vocabulary (De vocabulis)
- Book XI The human being and portents (De homine et portentis)
- Book XII Animals (De animalibus)
- Book XIII The cosmos and its parts (De mundo et partibus)
- Book XIV The earth and its parts (De terra et partibus)
- Book XV Buildings and fields (De aedificiis et agris)
- Book XVI Stones and metals (De lapidibus et metallis)
- Book XVII Rural matters (De rebus rusticis)
- Book XVIII War and games (De bello et ludis)
- Book XIX Ships, buildings, and clothing (De navibus aedificiis et vestibus)
- Book XX (Provisions and various implements)
- APPENDIX Correspondence of Isidore and Braulio
- INDEX
Book XIV - The earth and its parts (De terra et partibus)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Note to the Reader
- INTRODUCTION
- THE ETYMOLOGIES
- Analytical table of contents
- Book I Grammar (De grammatica)
- Book II Rhetoric and dialectic (De rhetorica et dialectica)
- Book III Mathematics (De mathematica)
- Book IV Medicine (De medicina)
- Book V Laws and times (De legibus et temporibus)
- Book VI Books and ecclesiastical offices (De libris et officiis ecclesiasticis)
- Book VII God, angels, and saints (De deo, angelis et sanctis)
- Book VIII The church and sects (De ecclesia et sectis)
- Book IX Languages, nations, reigns, the military, citizens, family relationships (De linguis, gentibus, regnis, militia, civibus, affinitatibus)
- Book X Vocabulary (De vocabulis)
- Book XI The human being and portents (De homine et portentis)
- Book XII Animals (De animalibus)
- Book XIII The cosmos and its parts (De mundo et partibus)
- Book XIV The earth and its parts (De terra et partibus)
- Book XV Buildings and fields (De aedificiis et agris)
- Book XVI Stones and metals (De lapidibus et metallis)
- Book XVII Rural matters (De rebus rusticis)
- Book XVIII War and games (De bello et ludis)
- Book XIX Ships, buildings, and clothing (De navibus aedificiis et vestibus)
- Book XX (Provisions and various implements)
- APPENDIX Correspondence of Isidore and Braulio
- INDEX
Summary
i. The earth (De terra) 1. The earth is placed in the central region of the world, standing fast in the center equidistant from all other parts of the sky. In the singular the word ‘earth’ (terra) signifies the whole globe, but in the plural, distinct parts. Logic supplies the earth's diverse names, for the word terra is derived from the upper surface that is worn away (terere); soil (humus) from the lower, or moist (humidus) earth, like that under the sea; ground (tellus), because we carry away (tollere) what it produces; as such it is also called Ops (i.e. the earth-goddess of plenty) because it produces wealth (ops) from its crops; and also ‘arable land’ (arvum), from plowing (arare) and cultivating. 2. However, to distinguish it properly from water, earth is called ‘dry land’ (aridum), as Scripture says (cf. Genesis 1:10): “God called the dry land (aridus) Earth.” The earth's natural attribute is that of dryness, for if it is moist, that comes from a union with water. Of its motion some say that it is the wind in its hollows that, itself moved, moves the earth. Sallust (Histories 2.28): “A number of mountains and hills subsided, sundered by the wind rushing through the hollows of the earth.” 3. Others maintain that life-giving water moves in the earth and simultaneously shakes it, like a vessel, as for instance Lucretius (see On the Nature of Things 6.555).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Etymologies of Isidore of Seville , pp. 285 - 300Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006