Tag: Early onomastic corpus

VALÉRIA TÓTH, Onomatosystematical analyses in the early Old Hungarian Era (Abaúj and Bars counties). 2001.

The book is closely related to the historical-etymologyical dictionary of toponyms of Abaúj and Bars counties (Valéria Tóth, Debrecen, 2001). The book lays special emphasis on the systematic approach, which means meaning that the names are analysed as elements of a larger system. It is believed that the main correlations within the system itself can…

RITA PÓCZOS, The linguistic analysis of the settlement names of Borsod and Bodrog counties in the Árpád Era. 2001.

The Bodrog and Borsod counties used to be regions of the Hungarian language territory that were situated a long way from each other and had different natural and socio-geographical potentialities. What the author examines in her work is whether these differences are reflected in the settlement name system which can be reconstructed on the basis…

VALÉRIA TÓTH, A historical-etymological dictionary of the toponyms of Abaúj and Bars counties in the Árpád Era. 2001.

As a PhD student at the Department of Hungarian Linguistics of the University of Debrecen, the author undertook to process the entire toponymic corpus of Abaúj and Bars, two northern counties of historical Hungary. The counties are separated from each other by a long distance. Because all studies in historical onomastics are grounded on the…

ÁGNES BÉNYEI–GERGELY PETHŐ, Linguistic analysis of the settlement names of Győr County in the Árpád Era. 1998.

The authors set the aim to describe the settlement names of the Árpád Era in Győr county and outline their system. The toponymic corpus examined by the authors has been taken from a monumental work by György Györffy (Az Árpád-kori Magyarország történeti földrajza [Historical geography of Hungary in the Árpád Era]. 2. Budapest, 1987). The…

ISTVÁN HOFFMANN–ANITA RÁCZ–VALÉRIA TÓTH, Data on toponymic history from the early Old Hungarian Era. 1–4. 1997–2017.

Earlier in the research of old Hungarian toponyms, the study of settlement names was given great priority. The primary reason for this preference was that, besides their philological value as onomastic sources, they were also important as conveyors of historical information. In the earliest Hungarian written records, Latin charters that emerged the first millennium, several…