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Plädoyer für den möglichen besonderen Beitrag der Namenforschung zur Landesgeschichte: zwei Urkunden aus dem 11. und 12. Jahrhundert und ihre Aussagen zu Namen und Geschichte in der Mark MeißenHengst, Karlheinz 25 September 2018 (has links)
Two historical documents from the 11th and 12th centuries and their onomastic problems for historical and linguistic researches. The paper presents documents about an agreement between the famous bishop Benno of Meißen and a single noble slave named Bor. Some villages near the Elbe River were exchanged in the western territory not far from Dresden. Up till now a convincing localization of some of them is missing. And it is unusual that five villages are named with nine different names. Therefore the article treats some questions with consideration of historical and ecclesiastical connections. The results of an interdisciplinary analysis try to show the progress of Christianizing in the 11th century as well as the foundation of new villages in the 12th century. And a consequence of this development was that the majority of German speakers used new names for old and meanwhile enlarged settlement.
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Zur Entwicklung deutscher Zunamen in neuerer Zeit: Beobachtungen an Adressbüchern der Stadt DresdenHellfritzsch, Volkmar 25 September 2018 (has links)
Taking the oldest city directories of Dresden as an example, the article wants to draw the onomasticians’ attention to a special kind of research sources which has been largely ignored thus far. Initial analyses of selected linguistic and onomastic items show that due to the digital accessibility of these corpora more detailed knowledge, mainly concerning the development of personal names in the 18th and 19th centuries, should be possible.
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Langobardisch-fränkische Ortsnamen in Oberitalien: zu den toponymischen Typen Stuttgart, Gamundio und Herstall / WardstallHaubrichs, Wolfgang 25 September 2018 (has links)
The article deals with three types of Germanic toponyms found in Northern Italy. The type *stôde-gardôn ‘studfarm, horse breeding’, widespread in the Padanian plain between Torino and Verona, seems to have been in the beginning a Langobardic loanword in the regional Italo-Romance idioms. In contrast the place name Gamundio, denoting a royal fisc near Alessandria, has many early parallels in the Frankish regions of the Rhineland, of Lorraine and Belgium, like Sarreguemines/Saargemünd (F, Moselle), 711 Gamundiis < *ga-munthja ‘ground about the mouth of a river’. Also Guastalla north of Reggio- Emilia, 864 Wardi-stalla ‘watchtower, guard’, name of a royal court again, has narrow parallels in the regnum Francorum. So most probably these two toponyms had their origins in the terminology of the Franks.
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Remotivierung bei Eigennamen: Kontingenz – Typologie – TheorieHarnisch, Rüdiger 25 September 2018 (has links)
Remotivation, conceived as a combination of semantic re-interpretation and formal re-segmentation, does not only affect appellative signs, but also proper names. First, remotivation processes are contrasted with demotivation processes (de-semantization and de-segmentation) and it is argued against the claim of uni-directionality. Then, four types of remotivation of proper names are elaborated: the sign-based semantic strategies of (1) reanalysis (of words [folk etymology], of clitics, and of affixes) and (2) pleonastic/tautologic doubling (of morphemes); furthermore the usage-based pragmatic strategies of (3) re-contextualization (of context-independent signs) and (4) re-locution (of illocutively meant signs). These processes turn out to be high-grade contingent in the way which linguistic material the speakers/hearers grasp to do their remotivation.
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Altstraßen und Ortsnamentypen ‒ am Beispiel des Bayern und Böhmen verbindenden Fernwegs BaierwegHackl, Stefan, Janka, Wolfgang 25 September 2018 (has links)
The aim of this article is to show connections between the course of early and high medieval old streets and the occurrence of place name types with their specific time composition. The names of the towns on the Baierweg long-distance route linking Bavaria and Bohemia are examined here as examples. The determination of the etymology is followed by a typological evaluation, which shows the important role of the Baierweg as an orientation axis for settlement activity in the later early Middle Ages.
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Traditio et innovatio nominumGordón Peral, María Dolores 25 September 2018 (has links)
The libros de repartimiento are a type of text that has an enormous value to understand the historical moment that gave rise to the process of the formation of the toponymy as we know it today in the areas incorporated to the Spanish speaking territory in different moments of the historical process traditionally known as Reconquista. A text of this type exists also for the Sevillian municipality of Écija, although this one presents some peculiarities that differentiate it from other repartimientos. In this study we analyze in detail the toponymy contained in the medieval text and reconstruct the context in which the territory was recognized by the persons in charge of the distribution of the lands. The conclusions that we extract are of great interest to know the process of creation of names based on Castilian and the context of linguistic contact that allowed the transmission of names from one stratum to another.
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Doanagsindl und Woidhausmich: bairische Namen von SagengestaltenEller-Wildfeuer, Nicole, Wildfeuer, Alfred 25 September 2018 (has links)
The article focusses on names used for the denomination of legendary figures in Bavaria (especially in the Eastern Part of Bavaria and in the Bavarian Forest). In the beginning, short information on the cultural sciences of the issue will be presented, followed by terminological classification. The main part illustrates patterns of denomination concerning the selected legendary figures.
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Celtic whispers: revisiting the problems of the relation between Brittonic and Old EnglishCoates, Richard 27 September 2018 (has links)
The chronology of the English intervention in Britain has recently become controversial among population historians, but the linguistic evidence for its timing and its nature has remained largely unchanged. In this paper I set out to review once again the small amount of toponymic evidence and the almost non-existent lexical evidence for Brittonic-English contact in the earliest English centuries. This linguistic evidence has led to diverse responses among historians and archaeologists, but since it is primary evidence it is legitimate to explore again the question of what historical scenarios of ethnic contact it is compatible with: extermination, expulsion, enslavement, assimilation, cultural overwhelming or ignoring; and mass English population movement versus élite expatriate settlement from beyond the North Sea.
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Zum Ortsnamen MerseburgCasemir, Kirstin, Udolph, Jürgen 27 September 2018 (has links)
The place name Merseburg has been debated vigorously in academic research. On the basis of a larger number of comparable names, the authors suggest a derivation of the name which differs from previous explanations. Besides the root - burg one has to assume a basic approach *Mars~ in the determiner which can be interpreted as an -s-extension of -mar “swamp, bog, pond”, to be found in numerous names.
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Der alttschechische Text des „Sächsischen Weichbildrechts“: erläuternde Zusätze und okkasionelle ÜbernahmeBily, Inge 27 September 2018 (has links)
The old-czech text of the „Saxon Weichbildrecht“: Occasional takeover and explanatory additions. Medieval legal terms from two texts of the extensive and branched group of sources of the Saxon-Magdeburg law are at the center of our article: the early-new-high-german and the old-czech text of „Saxon Weichbildrecht”. Transmission of legal terms of the early-new-highgerman text into the old-czech one stands in the focus of interest. In addition to predominantly adequate transmission of the legal terms, there can be found occasional takeover and explanatory additions. Conclusions at the end summarize the results.
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