## Dye
**Dye** (noun/verb) — a substance used to colour material, or the act of colouring with such a substance.
### Old English Roots
The word descends from Old English **dēag** (noun, *dye, colour, hue*) and the related verb **dēagian** (*to dye*). These forms are well-attested in Anglo-Saxon texts, appearing in contexts that reveal how central colouring was to early English material life.
### Proto-Germanic and Beyond
The Old English dēag traces back to Proto-Germanic **\*daugō**, a reconstruction supported by cognates across the Germanic family. The word has no certain Indo-European cognate beyond Germanic, suggesting either that it is a specifically Germanic innovation or that its deeper roots have been obscured.
### Anglo-Saxon Dyeing Tradition
Behind the word lies an entire world of plant-based colour that defined the appearance of early medieval England. Anglo-Saxon dyers worked with three native plants above all others.
**Woad** (*Isatis tinctoria*) produced blue. Julius Caesar noted that the Britons painted themselves with woad. By the Anglo-Saxon period, woad had moved from war-paint to the dye vat: it was cultivated across the lowlands, processed through fermentation, and used to produce the deep blues found in surviving textile fragments.
**Madder** (*Rubia tinctorum*) gave red. Its roots contain alizarin and purpurin, compounds that bond with wool under mordanting to produce colours ranging from orange-red to deep crimson. Madder-red appears in textiles recovered from Anglo-Saxon graves, including at Sutton Hoo.
**Weld** (*Reseda luteola*) was the principal source of yellow. Combined with woad, it produced the greens that feature in many surviving embroideries. The Bayeux Tapestry — worked by English embroiderers — used a colour palette consistent with the Anglo-Saxon tradition, with weld-yellow prominent.
The Anglo-Saxon textile industry was far larger and more economically significant than its material remains suggest. Cloth production was a backbone of domestic wealth long before the great wool trade. Weaving and dyeing were largely women's work, organised at the household level but producing goods that entered networks of exchange extending across the North Sea. Continental sources record English cloth — specifically dyed cloth — as a desirable trade commodity
### The Dye/Die Distinction
One of the more deliberate interventions in English spelling history concerns the near-collision of *dye* and *die*. In Middle English, both words were spelled *dyen* or *deyen* — two etymologically unrelated words converging on the same written form. *Die* (to cease living) derives from Old Norse **deyja**, entering English through the Danelaw. *Dye* carries the native Old English dēagian. As printers and lexicographers worked toward standardisation, the two forms were deliberately pulled apart: *die* for
### Survival Through the Conquest
Norman French brought a competing vocabulary of colour: *scarlet*, *azure*, and *vermilion* entered from French and Arabic. Yet *dye* held its ground. The native word survived intact, designating the practical work of colouring cloth, while French-derived terms clustered around luxury colours or heraldic contexts. The dyer's craft, rooted in field and vat, kept its Anglo-Saxon name.