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Place name origins

In much of the "Old World" (approximately Africa, Asia and Europe) the names of many places cannot easily be interpreted or understood;[1] they do not convey any apparent meaning in the modern language of the area. This is due to a general set of processes through which place names evolve over time, until their obvious meaning is lost. In contrast, in the "New World" (roughly North America, South America, and Australasia), many place names' origins are known.

Although the origin of many place names is now forgotten, it is often possible to establish likely meanings through consideration of early forms of the name.[1] Some general conclusions about the nature of place names, and the way in which place names change, can be made and are examined below. It is also possible to distinguish regional trends and differences in the naming of places, as is also discussed below.

Types of place name edit

There are several clearly definable types of place name, the primary division being between the names of natural features and the names of human settlements.[1] That the latter are 'places' is obvious. The case is slightly more ambiguous for natural features, depending on how exactly 'place' is defined, and what exactly the concept of a 'place' is used for. If, as is probable, natural features were originally given names to distinguish nearby hills, streams etc. from each other, then these features can be thought of as places, in that they represent distinct geographic locations. However, as names are applied on a larger scale, they may become less useful as place names. For instance, a relatively small, distinct upland valley (e.g. Swaledale) clearly represents a definable geographic location. However, the broad, extended valley of a major river, such as the Trent, is not easily understood as a single location. That notwithstanding, it is probable that the origins of the names of both settlements and natural features is the same, namely to distinguish one from another; and thus that both should be considered place names.

Many other types of place name can be defined, for example those relating to tribal or personal names. Previously names relating to pagan religion were extensively studied as these were thought to be early. Another class studied was those relating to particular people, example: the Ancient British.

The place names also can be based upon the nature of the occupation of the people in that area or the particular function performed by the people in that area.[1]

Toponymic processes edit

There are identifiable processes which occur over time to place names, and which alter the place names in such a way that their original meanings are lost.[1] These apply to both the names of settlements and natural features, although more so to the former.

The processes by which place names change include abbreviation, conflation, convergence, development in the parent language (but stasis in the place name[vague]) and replacement of the parent language. The latter in particular can result in dramatic shifts in place names, since the original meaning (and often sounds) are not conveyed in the new language, the place name thus shifts to a form appropriate for the new language.

  • Abbreviation tends to break down a name into a more easily pronounced form, e.g.Cantwaraburh to Canterbury; Dornwaracaster to Dorchester; Eborakon (through Eoforwīc and Jorvik) to York.
  • Conflation is where two similar elements of place names become confused, for instance the Old English roots den (hill) and don (valley) are conflated in place names e.g. Willesden ('stream hill'),[2] Croydon ('crocus valley').[3]
  • Convergence occurs when place names drift towards other familiar phonemes in place names; e.g. in Abingdon (Aebbeduna, 'Aebbe's hill'),[4] the middle sound has converged to the familiar 'ing' found in many place names (usually meaning 'people of').
  • Evolution of the parent language may not change a place name by itself; indeed names may show more inertia to change than languages themselves. However, evolution of the parent language permits other processes to occur. For instance, if a name no longer means anything in the modified language, it may drift towards a new form; e.g. Maethelac ('Moot-oak') to Matlock.[5] Or, as the parent language changes, attributes which already form part of a name may be appended to the name. For instance Portsea Island ('Port-island island');[6] once the meaning of Portsea became obscure, it became necessary to add island.
  • Replacement of the parent language is one of the most dramatic processes of change. If, for whatever reason, a new language becomes spoken in the area, a place name may lose all meaning. At its most severe, the name may be completely replaced. However, often the name may be recycled and altered in some way. Typically, this will be in one of the above ways; as the meaning of place-name is forgotten, it becomes changed to a name suitable for the new language. For instance Brittonic Eborakon (perhaps 'place of the yew trees') became Anglo-Saxon Eoforwic ('Boar-town'), then Old Norse Jorvik ('Horse-bay'), and modern English York.
  • Elaboration of place names often occurred to make distinctions between similarly named settlements. For instance, in England, two nearby and related settlements often became 'lower/nether' and 'upper/higher';[7] or 'little' and 'great'[8] (or the equivalent in Latin, parva and magna). Alternatively, two geographically separated places might be distinguished by local features; e.g. Newcastle-under-Lyme and Newcastle upon Tyne; or Newton-le-Willows, Newton-by-Frodsham, Newton under Roseberry (and so on). In England, many additions were made in the medieval period, to show that settlements were ruled by certain families, e.g. as Stoke Mandeville.[9] Some elaborations (particularly in Latin) date back to medieval times, such as Weston-super-Mare ('Weston-on-sea'), while others were added relatively recently, for instance Bognor Regis ('Bognor of the King').[10]
  • Backformation: the process whereby names are derived from one another in the opposite direction to that which would be expected - in many cases a river with an obsolete or forgotten name is renamed after a town on its banks rather than vice versa. For example, the river running through Rochdale became known as the 'Roch' through this process. Cambridge perhaps uniquely illustrates both normal and back formation. Originally Grantabrice, a bridge on the Granta, the name became Cantebrugge, and then Cambrigge, from which the river was renamed 'Cam'.

Problems of interpretation edit

Place names often need specialists to interpret their meanings. Some of the main problems are:

  • Language. Sometimes the language used in the formation of a place name is unclear; for example, some names may be plausibly derived from either Old English or Celtic roots. In recent years there has been a tendency to seek Celtic origins for names in England that were previously taken to be Anglo-Saxon.
  • Element order. In Germanic languages, and thus in Old English and Old Norse, the substantive element is generally preceded by its modifier, such as "north farm" (Norwich), "Badecca's spring" (Bakewell). In Celtic place names the order is usually reversed with the thing being described (hill, valley, farm, etc.) as the first element, for example "settlement of the Cuebris" (Tregonebris), "mouth of the Dee" (Aberdeen). However, this is not true of all Celtic names, for example "bald hill" (Malvern).
  • Translation. The general similarity of Old Norse and Old English meant that the place names in the Danelaw were often simply "norsified". For instance, in Askrigg ('ash (tree) ridge') in Yorkshire, the first element is indubitably the Norse asc (pronounced ask), which could easily represent a "norsification" of the Old English element aesc (pronounced ash) with the same meaning.
  • False analogy. Sometimes, however, the place names were changed by new settlers to match pronunciation habits without reference to the original meaning. For example, the Old English name Scipeton ("sheep farm"), which would normally become *Shipton in modern English, instead was altered to Skipton, since Old English sc (pronounced 'sh') was usually cognate with Old Norse sk — thus obscuring the meaning, since the Old Norse word for 'sheep' was entirely different.
  • Lost reason. Interpreting some names can be difficult if the reason for the name is no longer evident. Some names originally referred to a specific natural feature such as a river, ford or hill that can no longer be identified. For example, Whichford (Warwickshire) means "the ford of the Hwicce", but the location of the ford is lost.
  • Confusion between elements. Pairs of original elements can produce the same element in a modern place name. For example, the Old English elements den (valley) and dun (hill) are sometimes confused, as they can now lack obvious meanings. Croydon is in a valley and Willesden is on a hill.
  • Multiple meanings. Some elements, such as wich and wick, can have many meanings. Generally wich/wick/wyke indicates a farm or settlement (e.g. Keswick "cheese farm"). However, some of the sites are of Roman or early Post-Roman origin, in which the wich represents Latin vicus ("place"). These vici seem to have been trading-posts. On the coast, wick is often of Norse origin, meaning "bay" or "inlet" (e.g. Lerwick, Scotland, Runswick, North Riding).

Names of landscape features edit

The names of natural or man-made features in the landscape tend to be older than those of settlements since the former are often more widely known. Names are given to water features, hills and valleys, islands and marshes, as well as woods and districts. Man-made landscape features that have been given names include roads and trackways as well as burial mounds, etc. Many topographic elements become incorporated into settlement names, together with plant, creature names or personal names. Many topographical words convey not just an image of the place but also a wealth of information about the likely size, status and pattern of farming practised by the community living there.[1][11]

Water was of major importance to the early settlers of an area, both for subsistence and for religious reasons. Names were given to springs, streams, rivers and lakes as well as marshes, bays and seas.[1] Eilert Ekwall carried out an early study of river names in England[12] while Krahe conducted a European-wide examination of river names which showed that there were common roots in the names over a wide area. There is still controversy over the language of these roots. Sometimes a generic word was adopted as a specific label, for example the Celtic word for river was afon, which is used in many cases as the name (Avon) of rivers in England.

Land characteristics were important to both hunters and farmers, and there are many terms relating to different types of hills and valleys. Some terms, like cumb and penn, were adopted from Celtic by Anglo-Saxons. Other terms relate to the expansion of farming.

Topographical names were held in low esteem by early place name scholars but their importance was raised in a book by Margaret Gelling, first published in 1978.[13] This discusses the many elements of topographical place names, with updates in 1988 and 1997.

Names of settlements edit

Most pre-modern settlement names contain a generic element describing the place's function (e.g. 'farm', 'market', 'fort') or a prominent natural feature, or both; if only one of these is present, it is often modified by a personal name or an adjective.

For instance, examples from England:

  • Personal name + function + feature - Todmorden - 'Totta's boundary valley'[14]
  • Personal name + function - Grimsby - 'Grimr's farm'[15]
  • Existing name + function - Exeter - 'River Exe (Roman) fort'[16]
  • Function + natural feature - Church Fenton - 'Marsh Farm (with a church)'[17]
  • Personal name + natural feature - Barnsley - 'Beorn's clearing'[18]
  • Existing name + natural feature - Cockermouth - 'River Cocker mouth'[19]
  • Function - Keswick - 'Cheese farm'[20]
  • Natural feature - Blackburn - 'Black stream'

These basic elements can also be found in place names in other countries; e.g., Amsterdam ('River Amstel dam'), Liechtenstein ('Light-stone'), Copenhagen (equivalent to “chapmen’s haven”), Paris ('Home of the Parisii'), Shanghai (approximately 'Seaport'), Tashkent ('Stone city'). These elements are also clearly present in the less 'weathered' New World place names - e.g. Fort Knox, Thunder Bay, Little Rock and so on. Carson City, for instance, was named for Kit Carson, and Belo Horizonte means "beautiful view". However, some apparent meanings may be deceptive; New York was not directly named after the English city of York but after the Duke of York, who was the head of the British Navy at the time of the British take-over, and Los Angeles was not named after angels but after the Virgin Mary, or the Queen of the Angels (El Pueblo de Nuestra Señora la Reina de los Angeles).

Countries which have seen repeated large-scale cultural and/or linguistic changes, such as England or France, tend to have more broken down place names, as the original meaning is forgotten and drifts more quickly. They may also have more linguistically diverse place names; for instance in England place names may have Pre-Celtic, Celtic, Roman, Anglo-Saxon, Norse, or Norman-French origins. Conversely, countries with a more uniform cultural/linguistic history tend to have less broken down and diverse place names - Wales for instance (especially when compared to neighbouring England).

Place name origins in Britain and Ireland edit

Various names have been used for the island of Britain, see Britain (name). The origin of place names of the countries within Britain are discussed below. Each country is divided into a number of counties.

England edit

Most English place-names are either Anglo-Saxon or Old Norse in origin but Celtic names are to be found over the whole country, most notably in Cornwall (see below) and counties bordering Wales. Other place-names are hybrids of Celtic and Anglo-Saxon elements. There is a high level of personal names within the place names, presumably the names of local landowners at the time of naming. In the north and east, there are many place names of Norse origin; similarly, these contain many personal names. In general, the Anglo-Saxon and Norse place names tend to be rather mundane in origin, the most common types being [personal name + settlement/farm/place] or [type of farm + farm/settlement] (almost all towns ending in -wich, -ton, -ham, -by, -thorpe, -stoke/stock are of these types).

In Shropshire and Herefordshire many Welsh place names are found in the borderlands such as Pontrilas and Trefonen. In Cornwall most place-names are Cornish in origin, whilst in Cumbria there remain a number of place names in Cumbric, the Brythonic language of this region; examples including Carlisle, Helvellyn and Blencathra.

Most old Roman settlements, whether actually inhabited or not, were given the title of -chester/caster in Anglo-Saxon (from the Latin castrum, 'camp' or its plural form castra); the specific names for each may only have little relation to the Roman names (e.g. Chester - 'Deva', Winchester - 'Venta Belgarum' etc.).

Many English places derive part of their name from the river upon which they were built, but in the 16th century many English rivers were renamed with back-formations from towns on their banks. Cambridge, perhaps uniquely, illustrates both effects: originally Grontabricc, a bridge on the Granta, the name became Cantebruge and then Cambrugge, from which the river was renamed Cam. The scholars of Oxford renamed the upper course of the River Thames running through Oxford to Dorchester-on-Thames as the "Isis", owing to an incorrect assumption that the Latin name of the river, Tamesis, represented a combination of "Thame" (a river that joins the Thames at Dorchester) and "Isis".

One place in Yorkshire which retains Celtic toponymy is Pen-y-ghent (one of the Yorkshire Three Peaks), whose name means Hill-by-the-Border in Cumbric, a Brittonic language.

Wales edit

The vast majority of place names in Wales are Welsh by origin, containing elements such as Llan-, Aber-, Pen- etc. Along the south coast of Wales, where English has historically been more widely spoken, many place names are commonly anglicized, such as Pontypool, derived from Pont-y-Pŵl. Many places throughout Wales have alternative names in English unrelated to the name in Welsh, for example, Newport (where the Welsh name Casnewydd means "New Castle") and Swansea (derived from the Norse meaning "Svein's island") for the Welsh Abertawe (Mouth of the River Tawe. In some cases these are in fact related to their Welsh name, but disguised through linguistic processes of mutation, for example Monmouth and the Welsh Trefynwy both referring to the River Monnow (Mon- < Monnow < Mynwy > -fynwy).

Welsh place names tend to be associated with natural features rather than people, hence elements describing rivers, hills and valleys are common. The exceptions are places with the prefix Llan, meaning 'Church', which often contain the name of the Saint the church is dedicated to, e.g. Llansantffraid - 'Church of St. Bridget'.

Scotland edit

In the islands of Scotland, particularly Orkney and Shetland, but also the Western Isles, there are many names of Norse origin; this is also true on Caithness and other coasts of the mainland.

In the Highlands, the names are primarily in Scottish Gaelic, with emphasis on natural features; elements such as Glen- (valley) and Inver- (confluence, mouth) are common. These have replaced Pictish names that still occur on the east coast.

In lowland Scotland, names are of more diverse origin. Many are Gaelic, but many are also from the Brythonic branch of Celtic languages (such as Ayr). There are also place names from Old English and Scots, such as Edinburgh.

Isle of Man edit

Most place-names are of Gaelic or Norse origin but there are traces of an earlier language in some names.

Channel Islands edit

Most place names derive from Norman-French.

Ireland edit

The vast majority of placenames in Ireland are anglicizations (adaptations to English phonology) of Irish language names. However, some names come directly from the English language or Scots language, and a handful come from Old Norse.

Place name origins in the United States edit

Place names in the United States are often taken from the European nation that first colonized the land. Many names that have been transferred from Britain, as is the case with Barnstable, Massachusetts and Danbury, Connecticut. Many others are of French origin, such as Detroit, Michigan, which was established along the banks of the river they called le détroit du lac Érié, meaning the strait of Lake Erie. Many in the former New Netherland colony are of Dutch origin, such as Harlem, Brooklyn and Rhode Island. Many place names are taken from the languages of native peoples. Specific (personal or animal) names and general words or phrases are used, sometimes translated and sometimes not.

A great many names that appear to be Native American in origin were created by non-Natives with at best a rudimentary grasp of native languages. Pasadena, California's early Anglo residents, looking for a pleasant sounding (euphonious) name for the town, used the Ojibwe word pa-sa-de-na, which means of the valley. Similarly, Negaunee, Michigan's name is derived from the Ojibwe word nigani meaning foremost, in advance, leading, which was determined to be the closest Ojibwe approximation to the English word pioneer.

Nine counties in the U.S. state of Michigan have names invented by Henry Schoolcraft, usually adapted from parts of Native American words, but sometimes having parts from Greek, Arabic and Latin roots.[21] (see List of counties in Michigan.) In some cases the native meanings of a place name are wholly lost, despite guesses and theories, for example Tampa and Oregon.

Place names in the United States tend to be more easily traceable to their origins, such as towns simply named after the founder or an important politician of the time, with no alterations except a simple suffix, like -town. Carson City, for instance, was named for Kit Carson. In the 21st century, real estate developers often conduct historical research in order to craft a name for a modern development that connects to the local history of the community. [22]

Place name origins in Canada edit

French, English, Latin and Gaelic derived names occur in Canada. There are also Indigenous place names.

Place name origins in Australia edit

Australian place names are mainly a mixture of Indigenous and British-derived toponyms.

Place name origins in New Zealand edit

New Zealand place names derive mostly from Maori and from British sources. The Maori named most of New Zealand's natural features. When Europeans began arriving in New Zealand from the 17th century they gave their own names to many geographical features and settlements, often after places in Britain or important settlers or famous British people. Recently there has been a movement to revive some Maori names.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Perono Cacciafoco, Francesco; Cavallaro, Francesco Paolo (March 2023). Place Names: Approaches and Perspectives in Toponymy and Toponomastics. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781108780384.
  2. ^ "Willesden". Key to English Place-names. Retrieved 29 May 2018.
  3. ^ "Croydon". Key to English Place-names. Retrieved 29 May 2018.
  4. ^ "Abingdon and St Helen Without". Key to English Place-names. Retrieved 29 May 2018.
  5. ^ "Matlock". Key to English Place-names. Retrieved 29 May 2018.
  6. ^ "Portsea Island". Key to English Place-names. Retrieved 29 May 2018.
  7. ^ "Nether and Upper Poppleton". Key to English Place-names. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  8. ^ "Little Wenham". Key to English Place-names. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  9. ^ "Stoke Mandeville". Key to English Place-names. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  10. ^ "Bognor Regis". Key to English Place-names. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  11. ^ Gelling, Margaret; Cole, Ann (2000). The Landscape of Place-Names (Revised ed.). Stamford: Shaun Tyas. ISBN 978-1-900289-26-9.
  12. ^ Ekwall, Eilert (1928). English River Names. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  13. ^ Gelling, Margaret (1993). Place Names in the Landscape. London: J.M. Dent. ISBN 978-0-460-86086-4.
  14. ^ "Todmorden and Walsden". Key to English Place-names. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  15. ^ "Great Grimsby". Key to English Place-names. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  16. ^ "Exeter". Key to English Place-names. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  17. ^ "Church Fenton". Key to English Place-names. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  18. ^ "Barnsley". Key to English Place-names. Retrieved 29 May 2018.
  19. ^ "Cockermouth". Key to English Place-names. Retrieved 29 May 2018.
  20. ^ "Keswick". Key to English Place-names. Retrieved 29 May 2018.
  21. ^ Jenks, William L. (1912). "History and Meaning of the County Names of Michigan". Collections and Researches of the Michigan Pioneer and Historical Society. 38: 439–478.
  22. ^ "What's in a Name? How Place Names Reveal Our History". History Associates. 5 September 2019. Retrieved 27 October 2019.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  •   Media related to Place name etymologies at Wikimedia Commons

place, name, origins, this, article, about, origins, place, names, themselves, discussion, scientific, study, place, names, toponymy, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, templa. This article is about the origins of place names themselves For a discussion of the scientific study of place names see Toponymy This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Place name origins news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate September 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message In much of the Old World approximately Africa Asia and Europe the names of many places cannot easily be interpreted or understood 1 they do not convey any apparent meaning in the modern language of the area This is due to a general set of processes through which place names evolve over time until their obvious meaning is lost In contrast in the New World roughly North America South America and Australasia many place names origins are known Although the origin of many place names is now forgotten it is often possible to establish likely meanings through consideration of early forms of the name 1 Some general conclusions about the nature of place names and the way in which place names change can be made and are examined below It is also possible to distinguish regional trends and differences in the naming of places as is also discussed below Contents 1 Types of place name 2 Toponymic processes 3 Problems of interpretation 4 Names of landscape features 5 Names of settlements 6 Place name origins in Britain and Ireland 6 1 England 6 2 Wales 6 3 Scotland 6 4 Isle of Man 6 5 Channel Islands 6 6 Ireland 7 Place name origins in the United States 8 Place name origins in Canada 9 Place name origins in Australia 10 Place name origins in New Zealand 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksTypes of place name editThere are several clearly definable types of place name the primary division being between the names of natural features and the names of human settlements 1 That the latter are places is obvious The case is slightly more ambiguous for natural features depending on how exactly place is defined and what exactly the concept of a place is used for If as is probable natural features were originally given names to distinguish nearby hills streams etc from each other then these features can be thought of as places in that they represent distinct geographic locations However as names are applied on a larger scale they may become less useful as place names For instance a relatively small distinct upland valley e g Swaledale clearly represents a definable geographic location However the broad extended valley of a major river such as the Trent is not easily understood as a single location That notwithstanding it is probable that the origins of the names of both settlements and natural features is the same namely to distinguish one from another and thus that both should be considered place names Many other types of place name can be defined for example those relating to tribal or personal names Previously names relating to pagan religion were extensively studied as these were thought to be early Another class studied was those relating to particular people example the Ancient British The place names also can be based upon the nature of the occupation of the people in that area or the particular function performed by the people in that area 1 Toponymic processes editThere are identifiable processes which occur over time to place names and which alter the place names in such a way that their original meanings are lost 1 These apply to both the names of settlements and natural features although more so to the former The processes by which place names change include abbreviation conflation convergence development in the parent language but stasis in the place name vague and replacement of the parent language The latter in particular can result in dramatic shifts in place names since the original meaning and often sounds are not conveyed in the new language the place name thus shifts to a form appropriate for the new language Abbreviation tends to break down a name into a more easily pronounced form e g Cantwaraburh to Canterbury Dornwaracaster to Dorchester Eborakon through Eoforwic and Jorvik to York Conflation is where two similar elements of place names become confused for instance the Old English roots den hill and don valley are conflated in place names e g Willesden stream hill 2 Croydon crocus valley 3 Convergence occurs when place names drift towards other familiar phonemes in place names e g in Abingdon Aebbeduna Aebbe s hill 4 the middle sound has converged to the familiar ing found in many place names usually meaning people of Evolution of the parent language may not change a place name by itself indeed names may show more inertia to change than languages themselves However evolution of the parent language permits other processes to occur For instance if a name no longer means anything in the modified language it may drift towards a new form e g Maethelac Moot oak to Matlock 5 Or as the parent language changes attributes which already form part of a name may be appended to the name For instance Portsea Island Port island island 6 once the meaning of Portsea became obscure it became necessary to add island Replacement of the parent language is one of the most dramatic processes of change If for whatever reason a new language becomes spoken in the area a place name may lose all meaning At its most severe the name may be completely replaced However often the name may be recycled and altered in some way Typically this will be in one of the above ways as the meaning of place name is forgotten it becomes changed to a name suitable for the new language For instance Brittonic Eborakon perhaps place of the yew trees became Anglo Saxon Eoforwic Boar town then Old Norse Jorvik Horse bay and modern English York Elaboration of place names often occurred to make distinctions between similarly named settlements For instance in England two nearby and related settlements often became lower nether and upper higher 7 or little and great 8 or the equivalent in Latin parva and magna Alternatively two geographically separated places might be distinguished by local features e g Newcastle under Lyme and Newcastle upon Tyne or Newton le Willows Newton by Frodsham Newton under Roseberry and so on In England many additions were made in the medieval period to show that settlements were ruled by certain families e g as Stoke Mandeville 9 Some elaborations particularly in Latin date back to medieval times such as Weston super Mare Weston on sea while others were added relatively recently for instance Bognor Regis Bognor of the King 10 Backformation the process whereby names are derived from one another in the opposite direction to that which would be expected in many cases a river with an obsolete or forgotten name is renamed after a town on its banks rather than vice versa For example the river running through Rochdale became known as the Roch through this process Cambridge perhaps uniquely illustrates both normal and back formation Originally Grantabrice a bridge on the Granta the name became Cantebrugge and then Cambrigge from which the river was renamed Cam Problems of interpretation editPlace names often need specialists to interpret their meanings Some of the main problems are Language Sometimes the language used in the formation of a place name is unclear for example some names may be plausibly derived from either Old English or Celtic roots In recent years there has been a tendency to seek Celtic origins for names in England that were previously taken to be Anglo Saxon Element order In Germanic languages and thus in Old English and Old Norse the substantive element is generally preceded by its modifier such as north farm Norwich Badecca s spring Bakewell In Celtic place names the order is usually reversed with the thing being described hill valley farm etc as the first element for example settlement of the Cuebris Tregonebris mouth of the Dee Aberdeen However this is not true of all Celtic names for example bald hill Malvern Translation The general similarity of Old Norse and Old English meant that the place names in the Danelaw were often simply norsified For instance in Askrigg ash tree ridge in Yorkshire the first element is indubitably the Norse asc pronounced ask which could easily represent a norsification of the Old English element aesc pronounced ash with the same meaning False analogy Sometimes however the place names were changed by new settlers to match pronunciation habits without reference to the original meaning For example the Old English name Scipeton sheep farm which would normally become Shipton in modern English instead was altered to Skipton since Old English sc pronounced sh was usually cognate with Old Norse sk thus obscuring the meaning since the Old Norse word for sheep was entirely different Lost reason Interpreting some names can be difficult if the reason for the name is no longer evident Some names originally referred to a specific natural feature such as a river ford or hill that can no longer be identified For example Whichford Warwickshire means the ford of the Hwicce but the location of the ford is lost Confusion between elements Pairs of original elements can produce the same element in a modern place name For example the Old English elements den valley and dun hill are sometimes confused as they can now lack obvious meanings Croydon is in a valley and Willesden is on a hill Multiple meanings Some elements such as wich and wick can have many meanings Generally wich wick wyke indicates a farm or settlement e g Keswick cheese farm However some of the sites are of Roman or early Post Roman origin in which the wich represents Latin vicus place These vici seem to have been trading posts On the coast wick is often of Norse origin meaning bay or inlet e g Lerwick Scotland Runswick North Riding Names of landscape features editThe names of natural or man made features in the landscape tend to be older than those of settlements since the former are often more widely known Names are given to water features hills and valleys islands and marshes as well as woods and districts Man made landscape features that have been given names include roads and trackways as well as burial mounds etc Many topographic elements become incorporated into settlement names together with plant creature names or personal names Many topographical words convey not just an image of the place but also a wealth of information about the likely size status and pattern of farming practised by the community living there 1 11 Water was of major importance to the early settlers of an area both for subsistence and for religious reasons Names were given to springs streams rivers and lakes as well as marshes bays and seas 1 Eilert Ekwall carried out an early study of river names in England 12 while Krahe conducted a European wide examination of river names which showed that there were common roots in the names over a wide area There is still controversy over the language of these roots Sometimes a generic word was adopted as a specific label for example the Celtic word for river was afon which is used in many cases as the name Avon of rivers in England Land characteristics were important to both hunters and farmers and there are many terms relating to different types of hills and valleys Some terms like cumb and penn were adopted from Celtic by Anglo Saxons Other terms relate to the expansion of farming Topographical names were held in low esteem by early place name scholars but their importance was raised in a book by Margaret Gelling first published in 1978 13 This discusses the many elements of topographical place names with updates in 1988 and 1997 Names of settlements editMost pre modern settlement names contain a generic element describing the place s function e g farm market fort or a prominent natural feature or both if only one of these is present it is often modified by a personal name or an adjective For instance examples from England Personal name function feature Todmorden Totta s boundary valley 14 Personal name function Grimsby Grimr s farm 15 Existing name function Exeter River Exe Roman fort 16 Function natural feature Church Fenton Marsh Farm with a church 17 Personal name natural feature Barnsley Beorn s clearing 18 Existing name natural feature Cockermouth River Cocker mouth 19 Function Keswick Cheese farm 20 Natural feature Blackburn Black stream These basic elements can also be found in place names in other countries e g Amsterdam River Amstel dam Liechtenstein Light stone Copenhagen equivalent to chapmen s haven Paris Home of the Parisii Shanghai approximately Seaport Tashkent Stone city These elements are also clearly present in the less weathered New World place names e g Fort Knox Thunder Bay Little Rock and so on Carson City for instance was named for Kit Carson and Belo Horizonte means beautiful view However some apparent meanings may be deceptive New York was not directly named after the English city of York but after the Duke of York who was the head of the British Navy at the time of the British take over and Los Angeles was not named after angels but after the Virgin Mary or the Queen of the Angels El Pueblo de Nuestra Senora la Reina de los Angeles Countries which have seen repeated large scale cultural and or linguistic changes such as England or France tend to have more broken down place names as the original meaning is forgotten and drifts more quickly They may also have more linguistically diverse place names for instance in England place names may have Pre Celtic Celtic Roman Anglo Saxon Norse or Norman French origins Conversely countries with a more uniform cultural linguistic history tend to have less broken down and diverse place names Wales for instance especially when compared to neighbouring England Place name origins in Britain and Ireland editMain article Toponymy in the United Kingdom and IrelandVarious names have been used for the island of Britain see Britain name The origin of place names of the countries within Britain are discussed below Each country is divided into a number of counties Further information List of generic forms in place names in the United Kingdom and Ireland and Etymological list of counties of the United Kingdom England edit Main article English toponymy Most English place names are either Anglo Saxon or Old Norse in origin but Celtic names are to be found over the whole country most notably in Cornwall see below and counties bordering Wales Other place names are hybrids of Celtic and Anglo Saxon elements There is a high level of personal names within the place names presumably the names of local landowners at the time of naming In the north and east there are many place names of Norse origin similarly these contain many personal names In general the Anglo Saxon and Norse place names tend to be rather mundane in origin the most common types being personal name settlement farm place or type of farm farm settlement almost all towns ending in wich ton ham by thorpe stoke stock are of these types In Shropshire and Herefordshire many Welsh place names are found in the borderlands such as Pontrilas and Trefonen In Cornwall most place names are Cornish in origin whilst in Cumbria there remain a number of place names in Cumbric the Brythonic language of this region examples including Carlisle Helvellyn and Blencathra Further information Cumbrian toponymy Most old Roman settlements whether actually inhabited or not were given the title of chester caster in Anglo Saxon from the Latin castrum camp or its plural form castra the specific names for each may only have little relation to the Roman names e g Chester Deva Winchester Venta Belgarum etc Many English places derive part of their name from the river upon which they were built but in the 16th century many English rivers were renamed with back formations from towns on their banks Cambridge perhaps uniquely illustrates both effects originally Grontabricc a bridge on the Granta the name became Cantebruge and then Cambrugge from which the river was renamed Cam The scholars of Oxford renamed the upper course of the River Thames running through Oxford to Dorchester on Thames as the Isis owing to an incorrect assumption that the Latin name of the river Tamesis represented a combination of Thame a river that joins the Thames at Dorchester and Isis One place in Yorkshire which retains Celtic toponymy is Pen y ghent one of the Yorkshire Three Peaks whose name means Hill by the Border in Cumbric a Brittonic language Wales edit Main article Welsh toponymy The vast majority of place names in Wales are Welsh by origin containing elements such as Llan Aber Pen etc Along the south coast of Wales where English has historically been more widely spoken many place names are commonly anglicized such as Pontypool derived from Pont y Pŵl Many places throughout Wales have alternative names in English unrelated to the name in Welsh for example Newport where the Welsh name Casnewydd means New Castle and Swansea derived from the Norse meaning Svein s island for the Welsh Abertawe Mouth of the River Tawe In some cases these are in fact related to their Welsh name but disguised through linguistic processes of mutation for example Monmouth and the Welsh Trefynwy both referring to the River Monnow Mon lt Monnow lt Mynwy gt fynwy Welsh place names tend to be associated with natural features rather than people hence elements describing rivers hills and valleys are common The exceptions are places with the prefix Llan meaning Church which often contain the name of the Saint the church is dedicated to e g Llansantffraid Church of St Bridget Scotland edit Main article Scottish toponymy In the islands of Scotland particularly Orkney and Shetland but also the Western Isles there are many names of Norse origin this is also true on Caithness and other coasts of the mainland In the Highlands the names are primarily in Scottish Gaelic with emphasis on natural features elements such as Glen valley and Inver confluence mouth are common These have replaced Pictish names that still occur on the east coast In lowland Scotland names are of more diverse origin Many are Gaelic but many are also from the Brythonic branch of Celtic languages such as Ayr There are also place names from Old English and Scots such as Edinburgh Isle of Man edit Most place names are of Gaelic or Norse origin but there are traces of an earlier language in some names Channel Islands edit Most place names derive from Norman French Ireland edit Main article Place names in Ireland The vast majority of placenames in Ireland are anglicizations adaptations to English phonology of Irish language names However some names come directly from the English language or Scots language and a handful come from Old Norse Place name origins in the United States editFurther information List of U S state name etymologies Place names in the United States are often taken from the European nation that first colonized the land Many names that have been transferred from Britain as is the case with Barnstable Massachusetts and Danbury Connecticut Many others are of French origin such as Detroit Michigan which was established along the banks of the river they called le detroit du lac Erie meaning the strait of Lake Erie Many in the former New Netherland colony are of Dutch origin such as Harlem Brooklyn and Rhode Island Many place names are taken from the languages of native peoples Specific personal or animal names and general words or phrases are used sometimes translated and sometimes not A great many names that appear to be Native American in origin were created by non Natives with at best a rudimentary grasp of native languages Pasadena California s early Anglo residents looking for a pleasant sounding euphonious name for the town used the Ojibwe word pa sa de na which means of the valley Similarly Negaunee Michigan s name is derived from the Ojibwe word nigani meaning foremost in advance leading which was determined to be the closest Ojibwe approximation to the English word pioneer Nine counties in the U S state of Michigan have names invented by Henry Schoolcraft usually adapted from parts of Native American words but sometimes having parts from Greek Arabic and Latin roots 21 see List of counties in Michigan In some cases the native meanings of a place name are wholly lost despite guesses and theories for example Tampa and Oregon Place names in the United States tend to be more easily traceable to their origins such as towns simply named after the founder or an important politician of the time with no alterations except a simple suffix like town Carson City for instance was named for Kit Carson In the 21st century real estate developers often conduct historical research in order to craft a name for a modern development that connects to the local history of the community 22 Place name origins in Canada editFrench English Latin and Gaelic derived names occur in Canada There are also Indigenous place names Place name origins in Australia editFurther information List of Australian place names of Aboriginal origin and List of reduplicated Australian place names Australian place names are mainly a mixture of Indigenous and British derived toponyms Place name origins in New Zealand editMain article New Zealand place names New Zealand place names derive mostly from Maori and from British sources The Maori named most of New Zealand s natural features When Europeans began arriving in New Zealand from the 17th century they gave their own names to many geographical features and settlements often after places in Britain or important settlers or famous British people Recently there has been a movement to revive some Maori names References edit a b c d e f g Perono Cacciafoco Francesco Cavallaro Francesco Paolo March 2023 Place Names Approaches and Perspectives in Toponymy and Toponomastics Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781108780384 Willesden Key to English Place names Retrieved 29 May 2018 Croydon Key to English Place names Retrieved 29 May 2018 Abingdon and St Helen Without Key to English Place names Retrieved 29 May 2018 Matlock Key to English Place names Retrieved 29 May 2018 Portsea Island Key to English Place names Retrieved 29 May 2018 Nether and Upper Poppleton Key to English Place names Retrieved 9 April 2021 Little Wenham Key to English Place names Retrieved 9 April 2021 Stoke Mandeville Key to English Place names Retrieved 9 April 2021 Bognor Regis Key to English Place names Retrieved 9 April 2021 Gelling Margaret Cole Ann 2000 The Landscape of Place Names Revised ed Stamford Shaun Tyas ISBN 978 1 900289 26 9 Ekwall Eilert 1928 English River Names Oxford Clarendon Press Gelling Margaret 1993 Place Names in the Landscape London J M Dent ISBN 978 0 460 86086 4 Todmorden and Walsden Key to English Place names Retrieved 9 April 2021 Great Grimsby Key to English Place names Retrieved 9 April 2021 Exeter Key to English Place names Retrieved 9 April 2021 Church Fenton Key to English Place names Retrieved 9 April 2021 Barnsley Key to English Place names Retrieved 29 May 2018 Cockermouth Key to English Place names Retrieved 29 May 2018 Keswick Key to English Place names Retrieved 29 May 2018 Jenks William L 1912 History and Meaning of the County Names of Michigan Collections and Researches of the Michigan Pioneer and Historical Society 38 439 478 What s in a Name How Place Names Reveal Our History History Associates 5 September 2019 Retrieved 27 October 2019 Further reading editPerono Cacciafoco Francesco and Francesco Paolo Cavallaro 2023 Place Names Approaches and Perspectives in Toponymy and Toponomastics Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781108748247 ISBN 9781108780384 Book 0 Book 1 DOIExternal links edit nbsp Media related to Place name etymologies at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Place name origins amp oldid 1183560559, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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