A Történeti magyar családnévatlasz előmunkálatairól
Date: 2011
Subject: családnév
nyelvföldrajz
országos összeírás, 1715
etnikum
magyar
nyelvföldrajz
országos összeírás, 1715
etnikum
magyar
Abstract:
JÁNOS N. FODOR – ÉVA F. LÁNCZ, Preliminary studies on the Atlas of Hungarian
Historical Family Names
In synchronic and diachronic surveys of family names, digital atlases have recently become ex-
tremely important tools, as they can provide information on the spatial distribution, localization, and
dialect differences of names and name variants. European onomastics has already produced some
very impressive works in the field, and Hungarian onomastics should also join the trend.
In Hungary, the current synchronic surveys on family names face several questions to which
adequate answers can only be gained from investigations into historical changes. The first steps to
build the database of the Hungarian historical personal names have already been taken. The present
database contains the 166,000 names of the first national census in 1715. The name corpus provides
an opportunity for several linguistic, onomastic and interdisciplinary enquiries, some of which are de-
scribed in the paper: 1) Lexical cartograms are used to examine the regionality of the names in order
to reveal extralinguistic factors (migration, economic and social relations, etc.), adopting an interdis-
ciplinary approach. 2) Personal names as elements of the language display dialectal, phonetic, mor-
phological and lexical features; thus, their analysis provides us with valuable insights into historical
dialectology. 3) Identifying the name-etymons helps us to find out the distribution of the linguistic
origin of the relevant name stock, which might serve as an indirect source of historical demographic
research to reconstruct contemporary ethnic conditions. 4) In name systemic investigation, the map-
ping and analysis of the regionality of certain family-name types are carried out. Morphological en-
quiries are aimed at discovering the geographical characteristics of certain formants (derivative suf-
fixes) and variants.