Difference between revisions of "Toponym"

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Toponyms are place-names, which can reveal the historical use or function of a site. The etymological origin of toponyms is not always clear, thus the interpretation of toponyms is often a hypothetical issue. Nevertheless, toponyms are important indicators, as historical landscape elements can be anticipated on the basis of meaningfully constituted place-names. In a maritime context this has been demonstrated in Denmark with the snekke epithet frequently found in coastal place names.[1] The snekke is a longship associated to the Danish leding (maritime levy) organisation. The historical character of an entire fjord region can be reconstructed on the basis of toponyms [2]
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B. Holmberg, 'Maritime Place-Names', in: O. Crumlin-Pedersen (ed.), Aspects of Maritime Scandinavia AD 200-1200 (Roskilde, 1991), pp.233-240
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Toponyms are place-names, which can reveal the historical use or function of a site.
T. Lemm & S. Kalmring, 'The Flensburg inlet in the Viking Age - a neglected maritime cultural landscape', in: B. V. Eriksen, A. Abegg-Wigg, R. Bleile & U. Ickerodt (eds.), Interation without borders (Schleswig, 2017), pp. 631-648.
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'''Description
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The etymological origin of toponyms is not always clear, thus the interpretation of toponyms is often a hypothetical issue. Nevertheless, toponyms are important indicators, as historical landscape elements can be anticipated on the basis of meaningfully constituted place-names. In a maritime context this has been demonstrated in Denmark with the ''snekke'' epithet frequently found in coastal place names.<ref>B. Holmberg, 'Maritime Place-Names', in: O. Crumlin-Pedersen (ed.), Aspects of Maritime Scandinavia AD 200-1200 (Roskilde, 1991), pp.233-240</ref> The ''snekke'' was a longship associated to the Danish ''leding'' (maritime levy) organisation. The historical character of an entire coastal landscape can be reconstructed on the basis of toponyms.<ref>C. Westerdahl, The maritime cultural landscape, in: The International Journal of Nautical Archaeology 21.1, 1992, pp. 9-11.</ref><ref>T. Lemm & S. Kalmring, 'The Flensburg inlet in the Viking Age - a neglected maritime cultural landscape', in: B. V. Eriksen, A. Abegg-Wigg, R. Bleile & U. Ickerodt (eds.), Interation without borders (Schleswig, 2017), pp. 631-648.</ref>

Latest revision as of 15:48, 30 December 2020

Definition

Toponyms are place-names, which can reveal the historical use or function of a site.


Description

The etymological origin of toponyms is not always clear, thus the interpretation of toponyms is often a hypothetical issue. Nevertheless, toponyms are important indicators, as historical landscape elements can be anticipated on the basis of meaningfully constituted place-names. In a maritime context this has been demonstrated in Denmark with the snekke epithet frequently found in coastal place names.[1] The snekke was a longship associated to the Danish leding (maritime levy) organisation. The historical character of an entire coastal landscape can be reconstructed on the basis of toponyms.[2][3]

  1. B. Holmberg, 'Maritime Place-Names', in: O. Crumlin-Pedersen (ed.), Aspects of Maritime Scandinavia AD 200-1200 (Roskilde, 1991), pp.233-240
  2. C. Westerdahl, The maritime cultural landscape, in: The International Journal of Nautical Archaeology 21.1, 1992, pp. 9-11.
  3. T. Lemm & S. Kalmring, 'The Flensburg inlet in the Viking Age - a neglected maritime cultural landscape', in: B. V. Eriksen, A. Abegg-Wigg, R. Bleile & U. Ickerodt (eds.), Interation without borders (Schleswig, 2017), pp. 631-648.