"Adelung": alludes to a predecessor dictionary editor.[1] The old high german word "adalunc" in its etymology was made up.
I became aware of these lemmata through this article: https://www.welt.de/kultur/article4127427/Es-war-einmal-das-...
[1] Johann Christoph Adelung (1732-1806): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johann_Christoph_Adelung
In some ways, I've long suspected that there was a lot of freedom in that to build a culture ideally suited for the then present situation. "Fuenf minuten vor der Zeit, ist des Deutschen Puenktlichkeit" (1) in particular always struck me as something invented because it made the factories and the trains run better. It was first written down in 1880, attributed by a Silesia newspaper to Pomerania, and I really don't know that many people 100 years earlier, say, would have had a conception of what a "German" was in that sense. And before trains and factories, in an era when time is primarily told by the bells of the town clock tower and looking at the angle of the sun, no one would have had a real conception of what five minutes meant. So it couldn't really have been some ancient saying, carried down for hundreds of years. It had to be invented right around 1880.
1: German "on time" is five minutes before it starts.
breaking days into two sets of 12 hours, and sixty minutes per hour with sixty seconds to a minute, has been practiced since Biblical times, no?
A shy girl in London loved these stories once. So did a boy from South Africa, and one in Belfast, and another in California. When their own narratives flowered, Beatrix Potter, J. R. R. Tolkien, C. S. Lewis, and George Lucas knew whom to thank. Without the labors of Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, there would be no Peter Rabbit, no Middle-earth, no Narnia, and definitely no Star Wars.
I have looked at the book contents and large parts of two book chapters are about this event, in one chapter about the circumstances that lead to the protest and in the other about its consequences.
Thanks for the Wikipedia link, I was not aware that the very important physicist Wilhelm Eduard Weber (for whom the magnetic flux unit is named), took also part in this protest.
She argues persuasively that the conventional origin normally told about the Grimm's fairy tales—-that they were recited by old peasant women remembering the ancient oral folktales of the Germanic people—-is not really true.
In fact the tales mainly came from middle class storytellers. And the two most important sources of the Grimm's tales were two Italian literary story collections from the Renaissance by Giovanni Straparola and Giambattista Basile.
It upended a lot of what I thought I knew about the origins of fairy tales.