An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language/Annotated/Ketzer

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Ketzer, masculine, ‘heretic,’ from Middle High German ketzer, masculine, ‘heretic,’ also ‘reprobate, Sodomite’ (not recorded in Old High German). The tz presents no difficulties in deriving the word from Greek καθαρός (καθαροί, a Manichean sect spread throughout the West in the 11th and 12th centuries, and persecuted by the Church), if it be assumed that Dutch ketter, ‘heretic,’ is a phonetic version of the High German word. It is true that High German tz from Greek θ (Latin th) cannot be demonstrated; the hard fricative th (þ, θ) may, however, be regarded phonetically as tz, since, e.g., King Chilperic's sign for the was none other than z; the þ in Old Icelandic words sounded also to the Germans of the 9th century like z; þór seemed to them zor. So too in Italy the καθαροί were called Gazari.