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List Of Subnational Name EtymologiesThis article provides a collection of the etymology of the names of subnational entities. This page generally only deals with regions and provinces; cities and other localities and features may appear listed under the individual country, with a link below. See Canadian provincial name etymologies Most of the names of the modern provinces appeared as coinages in the Ming Dynasty, and Qing Dynasty. The Republic of China (Nationalist) period and the People's Republic of China after 1949 inherited most of them, with their own modifications and creations. Note that most modern French dpartements take their names from local geographical features: usually rivers, occasionally mountain ranges or coasts. Thus most such names have a self-evident immediate origin: even non-speakers of French can deduce them with a minimum of geographical knowledge. The traditional provinces and regions (of any period) often bear names with more obscure and superficially richer histories. - Alsace - from Latin Alisatia, a latinised form of the Germanic name that also yields Old High German El-sasz, allegedly meaning "foreign settlement"
- Artois - from Latin Atrebatensis, adjectival form derived the Belgic tribe Atrebates; the name of its main city Arras (Atrecht in Dutch) derives directly from the tribe's name Atrebates, so Artois properly means "territory of Arras"
- Brittany - area occupied by refugee Britons from Roman Britain (Britannia) circa 500 AD
- Burgundy - part of the land settled by the East Germanic Burgundians, who possibly originated on the island now known as Bornholm
- Champagne - from the Latin campania (plain, open country, battlefield)
- Corsica - possibly from the Phoenician Korsai, which means something like "forest-covered"
- Dauphin - from the nickname and coat of arms of former ruler Guy VIII of Vienne: "dolphin"
- Franche-Comt - in French, literally the "Free County" of Burgundy (as opposed to the Duchy of Burgundy)
- Gascony - from the Latin word Vasco, term used to label a Vascon (or Basque)
- Languedoc - the region speaking the langue d'oc (as opposed to the regions whose language (langue d'ol) developed into modern French)
- Limousin - from an adjective referring to the local centre, Limoges
- Lorraine - from the Mediaeval Latin coining Lotharingia, meaning the lands granted as a kingdom in 855 AD to Lothair, son of the Holy Roman Emperor Lothair I
- Normandy - land settled by Viking Northmen in the early 10th century
- Provence - from Latin provincia (province), short for Provincia Narbonensis, the Roman province located in present-day southern France.
- Arcadia - from Arcas, the legendary eponymous leader of early Hellenic settlers
- Baden-Wrttemberg - created by joining Baden and Wrttemberg. Baden: after the city of Baden-Baden, formerly Baden, the name was doubled to distinguish it from the state. The name means "baths", after the springs in the city. Wrttemberg: origin unknown.
- Bavaria - after the tribe of the Baiuvarii, who probably gained their name from the land of Bohemia.
- Brandenburg - after the city of Brandenburg. The earlier Slavic name of the castle (Burg) of Brandenburg appears as Branibor (Branim's forest).
- Hesse - after the tribe of the Chatti.
- Lower Saxony - after the tribe of the Saxons. "Lower" was added in modern times to distinguish it from the state of Saxony.
- Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania - created by joining Mecklenburg with the western part of Pomerania, also called Hither Pomerania. Mecklenburg takes its name from a castle (Burg means "castle" in German), the origin of the first part remains unclear. Pomerania comes from Slavic roots meaning "near the ocean".
- North Rhine-Westphalia - created by joining the northern part of the Rhineland with Westphalia. Westphalia was the westernmost subdivision of the Saxon tribe; the origin of the second part (-falen in German) is unknown.
- Rhineland-Palatinate - created by joining parts of the Rhineland (after the Rhine river) with the Rhenish Palatinate, formerly a Palatine county, meaning that its count was the administrator of a palace of the Holy Roman Emperor. The word derives from Latin Palatinus "imperial", from Palatium "palace", after the location of the palace of the Roman Emperor Augustus on the Palatine Hill in Rome.
- Saarland - after the Saar river.
- Saxony - land of the Saxons (possibly the "sword-folk"). During the middle ages and early modern times, the name migrated from today's Lower Saxony to the current location of the state of Saxony.
- Saxony-Anhalt - created by joining the Prussian Province of Saxony (named after the tribe of the Saxons) with Anhalt.
- Schleswig-Holstein - created by joining Schleswig and Holstein. The district of Schleswig tales its name from the city of Schleswig, which in turn derives its name from the Schlei bay. The name "Holstein" comes from a Saxon subtribe named Holcetae.
- Thuringia - after the tribe of the Thuringii.
- Campania - from the Latin campania (countryside, plain, battlefield). Compare Champagne in France.
- Latium (in modern Italian: Lazio) - from the early Italic inhabitants known as Latins, in their turn associated with the mythological King Latinus turn, "Latins" (in Latin, Latīnī) -- as well as the name of King Latīnus, which is simply the singular of the same name -- are clearly derived from Latium by means of the ethnic suffix -īnus, with the obvious meaning of "inhabitant(s) of Latium", which makes this etymology ridiculously circular, but let that serve as a warning to the reader as to the quality of this and other etymologies on this page
- Lombardy - from the Germanic tribe of the Lombards (literally "long-beards" or "long-bearded axe people", or, according to another theory, "long-halberds"), who invaded Italy in the 6th century. Note: After the Lombard invasion, the name "Longobardia" or "Langobardia" applied to the whole of Italy for about two centuries, throughout Europe and also in Arabic (al-Ankubardiya). The name Italia did not return into wide use until the late 8th century
- Marche - literally. "marches", "borderlands". In the Middle Ages the region lay on the boundaries between imperial lands and the more independent areas of southern Italy. The March of Ancona became the best-known of such marches
- Sardinia - speculatively linked with the Shardana people and/or with Sardis
- Sicily - island settled by the Sicels
See Mexican state name etymologies - Holland (part of the Netherlands; but the term often refers to the country as a whole): Germanic "holt (i.e. wooded) land" (often incorrectly regarded as meaning "hollow marsh land")
- Batavia (Germanic): "arable land" (derived from the regional name "Betuwe", as opposed to the other regional name "Veluwe" meaning "fallow" or "waste" land)
- Amsterdam: from Amstelredam , which means 'dam over the Amstel' (the river which flows through present-day Amsterdam)
- Rotterdam: meaning 'dam over the Rotte' (the river flowing through through present-day Rotterdam)
- Alkmaar: from Aelcemaer , meaning 'lake of auks', due to the fact that lakes formerly surrounded the core of Alkmaar -- all of them now drained and thus turned into dry land
See also List of New Zealand place names and their meanings. - Auckland - in honour of George Eden, 1st Earl of Auckland, a patron of William Hobson
- Hawke's Bay - in honour of Edward Hawke, 1st Baron Hawke of Towton
- Levin - from a director of the railway company that created the town to help boost its railway
- Marlborough - to commemorate John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough
- Nelson - in honour of Horatio Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson
- Otago - anglicised from the Maori name Otakou, a kainga east of present-day Otago Harbour, originally meaning "one isolated village" or "place of red earth"
- Plimmerton - from John Plimmer, Wellington pioneer, director of the railway company that created the seaside resort to help boost its railway; central Wellington has Plimmer's Steps.
- Tasman - district named from the bay name, in honour of Dutchman Abel Tasman, commander of first European expedition to sight the country; also a mountain and glacier name. Abel Tasman National Park bears a fuller version of his name.
- Waikato- Named after the river Waikato, which itself means "flowing water"
- Wellington - in honour of Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington
See: Etymological list of counties of Romania - Bessarabia - from Basarab I, Wallachian king who led some expeditions in this land
- Bukovina - (in German: "Buchenland") = "beech land"
- Dobrogea - "good land"
- Haţeg - "Terra Herzog" = Duke's land
- Muntenia - from muntean = man of the mountains, from Romanian munte=mountain
- Oltenia - from the river Olt, called Alutus by the Romans, possibly from Latin lutum, meaning "mud" or "clay".
- Transylvania - "beyond the woods"
- Ardeal - "wooden hill" - arde expresses an Indo-European root meaning forest, the same as in English Forest of Arden and Belgian Ardennes Woods; Deal means hill in Romanian.
- Wallachia - "land of the foreigners".
- Amur River -- Amur is a word for "love"
- Grozny or Groznyy -- Russian for "threatening" or "terrible" or "dread" or "severe"
- Novaya Zemlya-- Russian for "new land"
- Novgorod -- from Russian roots meaning "new city"
- Novosibirsk -- roughly means "new Siberian city"
- Sakhalin -- derived from misinterpretation of a Manchu name "sahaliyan ula angga hada" (peak of the mouth of Amur River). "Sahaliyan" means "black" in Manchu and refers to the Amur River (sahaliyan ula).
- Vladikavkaz -- Russian for "ruler of the Caucasus" or "rule the Caucasus"
- Vladivostok -- Russian for "ruler of the East" or "rule the East"
- Volgograd -- Russian for "city of the Volga" or "Volga city"
- Andalusia -- from the Arabic name (Al-Andalus, with several suggested etymologies) formerly applied to the whole Iberian penenisula
See also British toponymy, List of generic forms in British place names, Etymological list of counties of the United Kingdom) - England - from Engla-lond, the land settled in the early 6th century by various peoples from Low Germany, among them the Angles (Latin Anglii) who originally inhabited the fish-hook shaped territory known as Angeln situated in present-day Schleswig. See Anglo-Saxons.
- Gibraltar - from Arabic "djebl al-Tarik" -> "Tarik's rock" because the Arab general Tarik-ibn-Ziyad started his conquest of the Iberian peninsula from here in 711.
- Northern Ireland - from Old Irish Eriu. Precise meaning uncertain, though it could derive from the name of a prehistoric fertility goddess.
- Scotland Literally 'Land of the Scots'. The Scottish people, originally from Ireland, settled parts of western Scotland in the 5th century, although the name didn't come about until after the 9th Century. Alba, the Gaelic name for Scotland means 'highlands' from the Latin albus or 'white' (describing the mountains). Caledonia, the Latin name, means forested highlands
- Wales - "land of the foreigners", from the Germanic 'welsche' the term used by Anglo-Saxon invaders of the British Isles for the native Celts they encountered. The Welsh native toponym "Cymru" means "fellow countrymen". Ancient Germanic tribes named several areas in Europe in a similar way, using their term for places inhabited by peoples of Celtic or Latin descent, including "Wallonia" in Belgium, Wallachia in Romania, "welsche Schweiz" (French-speaking Switzerland) and the archaic "Welschenland" (a term for Italy).
See also List of subnational name etymologies
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