Hydronym

A hydronym (from Greek: ὕδωρ, hydor, "water" and ὄνομα, onoma, "name") is a proper name of a body of water. Hydronymy, a subset of toponymy, the taxonomic study of placenames, is the study of the names of bodies of water, the origins of those names and how they are transmitted through history. Hydronyms can include the names of rivers, lakes, and even oceanic elements.

Compared to most other toponyms, hydronyms are very conservative linguistically, and people who move to an area often retain the existing name of a body of water rather than rename it in their own language.[1] For example, the Rhine in Germany bears a Celtic name, not a German name. [2] The Mississippi river in the United States bears an Anishinaabe name, not a French or English one.[3] The names of large rivers are even more conservative than the local names of small streams.

Therefore, hydronomy can be a tool to reconstruct past cultural interactions, population movements, religious conversions or older languages.[4] For example, history professor Kenneth H. Jackson identified a river-name pattern against which to fit the story of the Anglo-Saxon invasion of Britain and the pockets of survival of native British culture.[5] His river map of Britain divided the island into three principal areas of English settlement: the river valleys draining eastward in which surviving British names are limited to the largest rivers and Saxon settlement was early and dense, the highland spine and a third region whose British hydronyms apply even to the smaller streams.

Often a given body of water will have several entirely different names given to it by different peoples living along its shores. For example, Tibetan: , Wylie: rDza chu, ZYPY: Za qu and Thai: แม่น้ำโขง  [mɛ̂ː náːm kʰǒːŋ] are the Tibetan and Thai names, respectively, for the same river, the Mekong, in southeast Asia.

Hydronyms from various languages can all share a common etymology. For example, the Danube, Don, Dniester, Dnieper and Donets rivers all contain the Scythian name for "river" (cf. don, "river, water" in modern Ossetic).[6]

It is possible for a toponym to become a hydronym: for example, the River Liffey takes its name from the plain on which it stands, called Liphe or Life; the river itself was originally called An Ruirthech.[7][8] An unusual example is the River Cam, which was originally called the Granta, but when the town of Grantebrycge became Cambridge, the river's name changed to match the toponym.

See also

Notes

  1. Julie Tetel Andresen; Phillip Carter (2015). "Languages In The World: How History, Culture, and Politics Shape Language". John Wiley & Sons. p. 227. Retrieved 31 December 2015.
  2. Klement Tockner; Urs Uehlinger; Christopher T. Robinson (2009). "Rivers of Europe". Academic Press. p. 216. Retrieved 31 December 2015.
  3. Arlene B. Hirschfelder; Paulette Fairbanks Molin (2012). "The Extraordinary Book of Native American Lists". Scarecrow Press. p. 260. Retrieved 31 December 2015.
  4. The Editors of Encyclopædia Britannica. "Toponymy". Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved 31 December 2015.
  5. Jackson, Language and History in Early Britain, Edinburgh, 1953:220-23, summarized in H.R. Loyn, Anglo-Saxon England and the Norman Conquest , 2nd ed. 1991:7-9.
  6. Mallory, J.P. and Victor H. Mair. The Tarim Mummies: Ancient China and the Mystery of the Earliest Peoples from the West. London: Thames and Hudson, 2000. p. 106. Абаев В. И. Осетинский язык и фольклор (Ossetian language and folklore). Moscow: Publishing house of Soviet Academy of Sciences, 1949. P. 236
  7. Byrne, F. J. 1973. Irish Kings and High-Kings. Dublin. p.150
  8. Archived 2002-06-16 at the Wayback Machine.

References

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