Czech Toponyms of Foreign Origin as Witnesses of Multicultural Contacts in Central Europe
1.
SYSNO ASEP
0338866
Druh ASEP
C - Konferenční příspěvek (mezinárodní konf.)
Zařazení RIV
D - Článek ve sborníku
Název
Czech Toponyms of Foreign Origin as Witnesses of Multicultural Contacts in Central Europe
Tvůrce(i)
Harvalík, Milan (UJC-A)
Zdroj.dok.
Names in Multi-Lingual, Multi-Cultural and Multi-Ethnic Contact. - Toronto : York University, 2009 / Ahrens W. ; Embleton S. ; Lapierre A.
- ISBN 978-1-55014-521-2
Rozsah stran
s. 473-478
Poč.str.
6 s.
Forma vydání
CD-ROM - CD-ROM
Akce
Names in Contact: Names in a Multi-Lingual, Multi-Cultural, Multi-Ethnic World
Datum konání
17.08.2008-22.08.2008
Místo konání
Toronto
Země
CA - Kanada
Typ akce
WRD
Jazyk dok.
eng - angličtina
Země vyd.
CA - Kanada
Klíč. slova
Czech toponyms ; language contacts ; Central Europe
Vědní obor RIV
AI - Jazykověda
CEZ
AV0Z90610518 - UJC-A (2005-2011)
Anotace
The fact that on the territory of the present Czech Republic different nations and ethnic groups came to close contacts is also reflected in Czech toponymy where several layers of names of foreign origin can be distinguished. Besides the oldest toponyms (mostly hydronyms and oronyms) from the pre-Slavonic substrata (Morava, Odra, Labe, Jizera; Říp, Oškobrh) younger German names (adapted in various degree into Czech – e.g. Varnsdorf, Frýdlant, Liberec) occur often on the whole Czech territory. In the toponymy of the Eastern part of the Czech Republic (especially in Eastern Moravia in Carpathians) names of Romanian (or more precisely Balkan) origin can be found (Grúň), which have been introduced there with the so-called Wallachian colonisation. Czech toponymy has been considerably enriched with the geographical names borrowed from the Bible (Tábor, Oreb, Sion, Jordán) and with toponyms from remote regions (Temešvár, Amerika, Habeš, Port Artur, Korea) as well.