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Etymology of London

The name of London is derived from a word first attested, in Latinised form, as Londinium. By the first century CE, this was a commercial centre in Roman Britain.

A tablet from c. 65 AD, reading "Londinio Mogontio"- "In London, to Mogontius"

The etymology of the name is uncertain. There is a long history of mythicising etymologies, such as the twelfth-century Historia Regum Britanniae asserting that the city's name is derived from the name of King Lund who once controlled the city. However, in recent times a series of alternative theories have also been proposed. As of 2017, the trend in scholarly publications supports derivation from a Brittonic form *Londonjon.[1][2]

Attested forms edit

Richard Coates, in the 1998 article where he published his own theory of the etymology, lists all the known occurrences of the name up to around the year 900, in Greek, Latin, British and Anglo-Saxon.[3] Most of the older sources begin with Londin- (Λονδίνιον, Londino, Londinium etc.), though there are some in Lundin-. Later examples are mostly Lundon- or London-, and all the Anglo-Saxon examples have Lunden- with various terminations. He observes that the modern spelling with <o> derives from a medieval writing habit of avoiding <u> between letters composed of minims.

The earliest written mention of London occurs in a letter discovered in London in 2016. Dated AD 65–80, it reads Londinio Mogontio which translates to "In London, to Mogontius".[4][5][6][7] Mogontio, Mogontiacum is also the Celtic name of the German city Mainz.

Phonology edit

Coates (1998) asserts that "It is quite clear that these vowel letters in the earliest forms [viz., Londinium, Lundinium], both <o> and <u>, represent phonemically long vowel sounds". He observes that the ending in Latin sources before 600 is always -inium, which points to a British double termination -in-jo-n.

However, it has long been observed that the proposed Common Brittonic name *Londinjon cannot give either the known Anglo-Saxon form Lunden, or the Welsh form Llundein. Following regular sound changes in the two languages, the Welsh name would have been *Lunnen or similar, and Old English would be *Lynden via i-mutation.[8]

Coates (1998) tentatively accepts the argument by Jackson (1938)[9] that the British form was -on-jo-n, with the change to -inium unexplained. Coates speculates further that the first -i- could have arisen by metathesis of the -i- in the last syllable of his own suggested etymon (see below).

Peter Schrijver (2013) by way of explaining the medieval forms Lunden and Llundein considers two possibilities:

  • In the local dialect of Lowland British Celtic, which later became extinct, -ond- became -und- regularly, and -ī- became -ei-, leading to Lundeinjon, later Lundein. The Welsh and English forms were then borrowed from this. This hypothesis requires that the Latin form have a long ī: Londīnium.
  • The early British Latin dialect probably developed similarly as the dialect of Gaul (the ancestor of Old French). In particular, Latin stressed short i developed first into close-mid /e/, then diphthongised to /ei/. The combination -ond- also developed regularly into -und- in pre-Old French. Thus, he concludes, the remaining Romans of Britain would have pronounced the name as Lundeiniu, later Lundein, from which the Welsh and English forms were then borrowed. This hypothesis requires that the Latin form have a short i: Londinium.

Schrijver therefore concludes that the name of Londinium underwent phonological changes in a local dialect (either British Celtic or British Latin) and that the recorded medieval forms in Welsh and Anglo-Saxon would have been derived from that dialectal pronunciation.

Proposed etymologies edit

Celtic edit

Coates says (p. 211) that "The earliest non-mythic speculation ... centred on the possibility of deriving London from Welsh Llyn din, supposedly 'lake fort'. But llyn derives from British *lind-, which is incompatible with all the early attestations.[3] Another suggestion, published in The Geographical Journal in 1899, is that the area of London was previously settled by Belgae who named their outposts after townships in Gallia Belgica. Some of these Belgic toponyms have been attributed to the namesake of London including Limé, Douvrend, and Londinières.[10]

H. D'Arbois de Jubainville suggested in 1899 that the name meant Londino's fortress.[11] But Coates argues that there is no such personal name recorded, and that D'Arbois' suggested etymology for it (from Celtic *londo-, 'fierce') would have a short vowel. Coates notes that this theory was repeated by linguists up to the 1960s, and more recently still in less specialist works. It was revived in 2013 by Peter Schrijver, who suggested that the sense of the proto-Indo-European root *lendh- ('sink, cause to sink'), which gave rise to the Celtic noun *londos ('a subduing'), survived in Celtic. Combined with the Celtic suffix *-injo- (used to form singular nouns from collective ones), this could explain a Celtic form *londinjon 'place that floods (periodically, tidally)'. This, in Schrijver's reading, would more readily explain all the Latin, Welsh, and English forms.[1] Similar approaches to Schrijver's have been taken by Theodora Bynon, who in 2016 supported a similar Celtic etymology, while demonstrating that the place-name was borrowed into the West Germanic ancestor-language of Old English, not into Old English itself.[2]

Coates (1998) proposes a Common Brittonic form of either *Lōondonjon or *Lōnidonjon, which would have become *Lūndonjon and hence Lūndein or Lūndyn. An advantage of the form *Lōnidonjon is that it could account for Latin Londinium by metathesis to *Lōnodinjon. The etymology of this *Lōondonjon would however lie in pre-Celtic Old European hydronymy, from a hydronym *Plowonida, which would have been applied to the Thames where it becomes too wide to ford, in the vicinity of London. The settlement on its banks would then be named from the hydronym with the suffix -on-jon, giving *Plowonidonjon and Insular Celtic *Lowonidonjon. According to this approach, the name of the river itself would be derived from the Indo-European roots *plew- "to flow, swim; boat" and *nejd- "to flow", found in various river names around Europe. Coates does admit that compound names are comparatively rare for rivers in the Indo-European area, but they are not entirely unknown.[3] Lacey Wallace describes the derivation as "somewhat tenuous".[12]

Non-Celtic edit

Among the first scientific explanations was one by Giovanni Alessio in 1951.[3][13] He proposed a Ligurian rather than a Celtic origin, with a root *lond-/lont- meaning 'mud' or 'marsh'. Coates' major criticisms are that this does not have the required long vowel (an alternative form Alessio proposes, *lōna, has the long vowel, but lacks the required consonant), and that there is no evidence of Ligurian in Britain.

Jean-Gabriel Gigot in a 1974 article discusses the toponym of Saint-Martin-de-Londres, a commune in the French Hérault département. Gigot derives this Londres from a Germanic root *lohna, and argues that the British toponym may also be from that source.[14] But a Germanic etymology is rejected by most specialists.[15]

Historical and popular suggestions edit

The earliest account of the toponym's derivation can be attributed to Geoffrey of Monmouth. In Historia Regum Britanniae, the name is described as originating from King Lud, who seized the city Trinovantum and ordered it to be renamed in his honour as Kaerlud. This eventually developed into Karelundein and then London. However, Geoffrey's work contains many fanciful suppositions about place-name derivation and the suggestion has no basis in linguistics.[16]

Other fanciful theories over the years have been:

  • William Camden reportedly suggested that the name might come from Brythonic lhwn (modern Welsh Llwyn), meaning "grove", and "town". Thus, giving the origin as Lhwn Town, translating to "city in the grove".[17]
  • John Jackson, writing in the Gentleman's Magazine in 1792,[18] challenges the Llyn din theory (see below) on geographical grounds, and suggests instead a derivation from Glynn din – presumably intended as 'valley city'.
  • Some British Israelites claimed that the Anglo-Saxons, assumed to be descendants of the Tribe of Dan, named their settlement lan-dan, meaning "abode of Dan" in Hebrew.[19]
  • An unsigned article in The Cambro Briton for 1821[20] supports the suggestion of Luna din ('moon fortress'), and also mentions in passing the possibility of Llong din ('ship fortress').
  • Several theories were discussed in the pages of Notes and Queries on 27 December 1851,[21] including Luandun (supposedly "city of the moon", a reference to the temple of Diana supposed to have stood on the site of St Paul's Cathedral), and Lan Dian or Llan Dian ("temple of Diana"). Another correspondent dismissed these, and reiterated the common Llyn din theory.
  • In The Cymry of '76 (1855),[22] Alexander Jones says that the Welsh name derives from Llyn Dain, meaning 'pool of the Thames'.
  • An 1887 Handbook for Travellers[23] asserts that "The etymology of London is the same as that of Lincoln" (Latin Lindum).
  • Edward P. Cheney, in his 1904 book A Short History of England (p. 18), attributes the origin of the name to dun: "Elevated and easily defensible spots were chosen [in pre-Roman times], earthworks thrown up, always in a circular form, and palisades placed upon these. Such a fortification was called a dun, and London and the names of many other places still preserve that termination in varying forms."
  • A New Variorum Edition of Shakespeare (1918)[24] mentions a variant on Geoffrey's suggestion being Lud's town, although refutes it saying that the origin of the name was most likely Saxon.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Peter Schrijver, Language Contact and the Origins of the Germanic Languages, Routledge Studies in Linguistics, 13 (New York: Routledge, 2014), p. 57.
  2. ^ a b Theodora Bynon, 'London's Name', Transactions of the Philological Society, 114:3 (2016), 281–97, doi: 10.1111/1467-968X.12064.
  3. ^ a b c d Coates, Richard (1998). "A new explanation of the name of London". Transactions of the Philological Society. 96 (2): 203–229. doi:10.1111/1467-968X.00027.
  4. ^ "Earliest written reference to London found" 10 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine, on Current Archaeology, 1 June 2016. Retrieved on 26 January 2018.
  5. ^ "UK's oldest hand-written document 'at Roman London dig'" 13 August 2018 at the Wayback Machine, on BBC News, 1 June 2016. Retrieved on 26 January 2018.
  6. ^ "Oldest handwritten documents in UK unearthed in London dig" 31 March 2018 at the Wayback Machine, in The Guardian, 1 June 2016. Retrieved on 26 January 2018.
  7. ^ "Oldest reference to Roman London found in new tube station entrance" 27 November 2022 at the Wayback Machine, on IanVisits, 1 June 2016. Retrieved on 2022-11-27.
  8. ^ Peter Schrijver, Language Contact and the Origins of the Germanic Languages (2013), p. 57.
  9. ^ Jackson, Kenneth H. (1938). "Nennius and the 28 cities of Britain". Antiquity. 12: 44–55. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00013405. S2CID 163506021.
  10. ^ "The Geographical Journal". The Geographical Journal. 1899.
  11. ^ D'Arbois de Jubainville, H (1899). La Civilisation des Celtes et celle de l'épopée homérique (in French). Paris: Albert Fontemoing.
  12. ^ Wallace, Lacey (2015). The Origin of Roman London. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. p. 8. ISBN 9781107047570.
  13. ^ Alessio, Giovanni (1951). "L'origine du nom de Londres". Actes et Mémoires du troisième congrès international de toponymie et d'anthroponymie (in French). Louvain: Instituut voor naamkunde. pp. 223–224.
  14. ^ Gigot, Jean-Gabriel (1974). "Notes sur le toponyme "Londres" (Hérault)". Revue international d'onomastique. 26: 284–292. doi:10.3406/rio.1974.2193. S2CID 249329873.
  15. ^ Ernest Nègre, Toponymie générale de la France, Librairie Droz, Genève, p. 1494 [1]
  16. ^ "Legends of London's Origins". from the original on 9 July 2011. Retrieved 4 February 2008.
  17. ^ Prickett, Frederick (1842). "The history and antiquities of Highgate, Middlesex": 4. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  18. ^ Jackson, John (1792). "Conjecture on the Etymology of London". The Gentleman's Magazine. Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown.
  19. ^ Gold, David L (1979). "English words of supposed Hebrew origin in George Crabb's "English Synonymes"". American Speech. Duke University Press. 51 (1): 61–64. doi:10.2307/454531. JSTOR 454531.
  20. ^ "Etymology of 'London'". The Cambro Briton: 42–43. 1821.
  21. ^ "Notes and Queries". 1852. from the original on 23 June 2022. Retrieved 26 November 2020. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  22. ^ Jones, Alexander (1855). The Cymry of '76. New York: Sheldon, Lamport. p. 132. etymology of london.
  23. ^ Baedeker, Karl (1887). London and Its Environs: Handbook for Travellers. K. Baedeker. p. 60.
  24. ^ Furness, Horace Howard, ed. (1918). A New Variorum Edition of Shakespeare. J B Lippincott & co. ISBN 0-486-21187-8.

etymology, london, name, london, derived, from, word, first, attested, latinised, form, londinium, first, century, this, commercial, centre, roman, britain, tablet, from, reading, londinio, mogontio, london, mogontius, etymology, name, uncertain, there, long, . The name of London is derived from a word first attested in Latinised form as Londinium By the first century CE this was a commercial centre in Roman Britain A tablet from c 65 AD reading Londinio Mogontio In London to Mogontius The etymology of the name is uncertain There is a long history of mythicising etymologies such as the twelfth century Historia Regum Britanniae asserting that the city s name is derived from the name of King Lund who once controlled the city However in recent times a series of alternative theories have also been proposed As of 2017 the trend in scholarly publications supports derivation from a Brittonic form Londonjon 1 2 Contents 1 Attested forms 2 Phonology 3 Proposed etymologies 3 1 Celtic 3 2 Non Celtic 4 Historical and popular suggestions 5 ReferencesAttested forms editRichard Coates in the 1998 article where he published his own theory of the etymology lists all the known occurrences of the name up to around the year 900 in Greek Latin British and Anglo Saxon 3 Most of the older sources begin with Londin Londinion Londino Londinium etc though there are some in Lundin Later examples are mostly Lundon or London and all the Anglo Saxon examples have Lunden with various terminations He observes that the modern spelling with lt o gt derives from a medieval writing habit of avoiding lt u gt between letters composed of minims The earliest written mention of London occurs in a letter discovered in London in 2016 Dated AD 65 80 it reads Londinio Mogontio which translates to In London to Mogontius 4 5 6 7 Mogontio Mogontiacum is also the Celtic name of the German city Mainz Phonology editCoates 1998 asserts that It is quite clear that these vowel letters in the earliest forms viz Londinium Lundinium both lt o gt and lt u gt represent phonemically long vowel sounds He observes that the ending in Latin sources before 600 is always inium which points to a British double termination in jo n However it has long been observed that the proposed Common Brittonic name Londinjon cannot give either the known Anglo Saxon form Lunden or the Welsh form Llundein Following regular sound changes in the two languages the Welsh name would have been Lunnen or similar and Old English would be Lynden via i mutation 8 Coates 1998 tentatively accepts the argument by Jackson 1938 9 that the British form was on jo n with the change to inium unexplained Coates speculates further that the first i could have arisen by metathesis of the i in the last syllable of his own suggested etymon see below Peter Schrijver 2013 by way of explaining the medieval forms Lunden and Llundein considers two possibilities In the local dialect of Lowland British Celtic which later became extinct ond became und regularly and i became ei leading to Lundeinjon later Lundein The Welsh and English forms were then borrowed from this This hypothesis requires that the Latin form have a long i Londinium The early British Latin dialect probably developed similarly as the dialect of Gaul the ancestor of Old French In particular Latin stressed short i developed first into close mid e then diphthongised to ei The combination ond also developed regularly into und in pre Old French Thus he concludes the remaining Romans of Britain would have pronounced the name as Lundeiniu later Lundein from which the Welsh and English forms were then borrowed This hypothesis requires that the Latin form have a short i Londinium Schrijver therefore concludes that the name of Londinium underwent phonological changes in a local dialect either British Celtic or British Latin and that the recorded medieval forms in Welsh and Anglo Saxon would have been derived from that dialectal pronunciation Proposed etymologies editCeltic edit Coates says p 211 that The earliest non mythic speculation centred on the possibility of deriving London from Welsh Llyn din supposedly lake fort But llyn derives from British lind which is incompatible with all the early attestations 3 Another suggestion published in The Geographical Journal in 1899 is that the area of London was previously settled by Belgae who named their outposts after townships in Gallia Belgica Some of these Belgic toponyms have been attributed to the namesake of London including Lime Douvrend and Londinieres 10 H D Arbois de Jubainville suggested in 1899 that the name meant Londino s fortress 11 But Coates argues that there is no such personal name recorded and that D Arbois suggested etymology for it from Celtic londo fierce would have a short vowel Coates notes that this theory was repeated by linguists up to the 1960s and more recently still in less specialist works It was revived in 2013 by Peter Schrijver who suggested that the sense of the proto Indo European root lendh sink cause to sink which gave rise to the Celtic noun londos a subduing survived in Celtic Combined with the Celtic suffix injo used to form singular nouns from collective ones this could explain a Celtic form londinjon place that floods periodically tidally This in Schrijver s reading would more readily explain all the Latin Welsh and English forms 1 Similar approaches to Schrijver s have been taken by Theodora Bynon who in 2016 supported a similar Celtic etymology while demonstrating that the place name was borrowed into the West Germanic ancestor language of Old English not into Old English itself 2 Coates 1998 proposes a Common Brittonic form of either Lōondonjon or Lōnidonjon which would have become Lundonjon and hence Lundein or Lundyn An advantage of the form Lōnidonjon is that it could account for Latin Londinium by metathesis to Lōnodinjon The etymology of this Lōondonjon would however lie in pre Celtic Old European hydronymy from a hydronym Plowonida which would have been applied to the Thames where it becomes too wide to ford in the vicinity of London The settlement on its banks would then be named from the hydronym with the suffix on jon giving Plowonidonjon and Insular Celtic Lowonidonjon According to this approach the name of the river itself would be derived from the Indo European roots plew to flow swim boat and nejd to flow found in various river names around Europe Coates does admit that compound names are comparatively rare for rivers in the Indo European area but they are not entirely unknown 3 Lacey Wallace describes the derivation as somewhat tenuous 12 Non Celtic edit Among the first scientific explanations was one by Giovanni Alessio in 1951 3 13 He proposed a Ligurian rather than a Celtic origin with a root lond lont meaning mud or marsh Coates major criticisms are that this does not have the required long vowel an alternative form Alessio proposes lōna has the long vowel but lacks the required consonant and that there is no evidence of Ligurian in Britain Jean Gabriel Gigot in a 1974 article discusses the toponym of Saint Martin de Londres a commune in the French Herault departement Gigot derives this Londres from a Germanic root lohna and argues that the British toponym may also be from that source 14 But a Germanic etymology is rejected by most specialists 15 Historical and popular suggestions editThe earliest account of the toponym s derivation can be attributed to Geoffrey of Monmouth In Historia Regum Britanniae the name is described as originating from King Lud who seized the city Trinovantum and ordered it to be renamed in his honour as Kaerlud This eventually developed into Karelundein and then London However Geoffrey s work contains many fanciful suppositions about place name derivation and the suggestion has no basis in linguistics 16 Other fanciful theories over the years have been William Camden reportedly suggested that the name might come from Brythonic lhwn modern Welsh Llwyn meaning grove and town Thus giving the origin as Lhwn Town translating to city in the grove 17 John Jackson writing in the Gentleman s Magazine in 1792 18 challenges the Llyn din theory see below on geographical grounds and suggests instead a derivation from Glynn din presumably intended as valley city Some British Israelites claimed that the Anglo Saxons assumed to be descendants of the Tribe of Dan named their settlement lan dan meaning abode of Dan in Hebrew 19 An unsigned article in The Cambro Briton for 1821 20 supports the suggestion of Luna din moon fortress and also mentions in passing the possibility of Llong din ship fortress Several theories were discussed in the pages of Notes and Queries on 27 December 1851 21 including Luandun supposedly city of the moon a reference to the temple of Diana supposed to have stood on the site of St Paul s Cathedral and Lan Dian or Llan Dian temple of Diana Another correspondent dismissed these and reiterated the common Llyn din theory In The Cymry of 76 1855 22 Alexander Jones says that the Welsh name derives from Llyn Dain meaning pool of the Thames An 1887 Handbook for Travellers 23 asserts that The etymology of London is the same as that of Lincoln Latin Lindum Edward P Cheney in his 1904 book A Short History of England p 18 attributes the origin of the name to dun Elevated and easily defensible spots were chosen in pre Roman times earthworks thrown up always in a circular form and palisades placed upon these Such a fortification was called a dun and London and the names of many other places still preserve that termination in varying forms A New Variorum Edition of Shakespeare 1918 24 mentions a variant on Geoffrey s suggestion being Lud s town although refutes it saying that the origin of the name was most likely Saxon References edit a b Peter Schrijver Language Contact and the Origins of the Germanic Languages Routledge Studies in Linguistics 13 New York Routledge 2014 p 57 a b Theodora Bynon London s Name Transactions of the Philological Society 114 3 2016 281 97 doi 10 1111 1467 968X 12064 a b c d Coates Richard 1998 A new explanation of the name of London Transactions of the Philological Society 96 2 203 229 doi 10 1111 1467 968X 00027 Earliest written reference to London found Archived 10 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine on Current Archaeology 1 June 2016 Retrieved on 26 January 2018 UK s oldest hand written document at Roman London dig Archived 13 August 2018 at the Wayback Machine on BBC News 1 June 2016 Retrieved on 26 January 2018 Oldest handwritten documents in UK unearthed in London dig Archived 31 March 2018 at the Wayback Machine in The Guardian 1 June 2016 Retrieved on 26 January 2018 Oldest reference to Roman London found in new tube station entrance Archived 27 November 2022 at the Wayback Machine on IanVisits 1 June 2016 Retrieved on 2022 11 27 Peter Schrijver Language Contact and the Origins of the Germanic Languages 2013 p 57 Jackson Kenneth H 1938 Nennius and the 28 cities of Britain Antiquity 12 44 55 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00013405 S2CID 163506021 The Geographical Journal The Geographical Journal 1899 D Arbois de Jubainville H 1899 La Civilisation des Celtes et celle de l epopee homerique in French Paris Albert Fontemoing Wallace Lacey 2015 The Origin of Roman London Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press p 8 ISBN 9781107047570 Alessio Giovanni 1951 L origine du nom de Londres Actes et Memoires du troisieme congres international de toponymie et d anthroponymie in French Louvain Instituut voor naamkunde pp 223 224 Gigot Jean Gabriel 1974 Notes sur le toponyme Londres Herault Revue international d onomastique 26 284 292 doi 10 3406 rio 1974 2193 S2CID 249329873 Ernest Negre Toponymie generale de la France Librairie Droz Geneve p 1494 1 Legends of London s Origins Archived from the original on 9 July 2011 Retrieved 4 February 2008 Prickett Frederick 1842 The history and antiquities of Highgate Middlesex 4 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Jackson John 1792 Conjecture on the Etymology of London The Gentleman s Magazine Longman Hurst Rees Orme and Brown Gold David L 1979 English words of supposed Hebrew origin in George Crabb s English Synonymes American Speech Duke University Press 51 1 61 64 doi 10 2307 454531 JSTOR 454531 Etymology of London The Cambro Briton 42 43 1821 Notes and Queries 1852 Archived from the original on 23 June 2022 Retrieved 26 November 2020 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Jones Alexander 1855 The Cymry of 76 New York Sheldon Lamport p 132 etymology of london Baedeker Karl 1887 London and Its Environs Handbook for Travellers K Baedeker p 60 Furness Horace Howard ed 1918 A New Variorum Edition of Shakespeare J B Lippincott amp co ISBN 0 486 21187 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Etymology of London amp oldid 1176810196, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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