Danske stednavne på -lund: Indledende studier

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Danske stednavne på -lund : Indledende studier. / Eggert, Birgit.

I: Norna - Rapporter, Nr. 86, 2011, s. 75-115.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Eggert, B 2011, 'Danske stednavne på -lund: Indledende studier', Norna - Rapporter, nr. 86, s. 75-115.

APA

Eggert, B. (2011). Danske stednavne på -lund: Indledende studier. Norna - Rapporter, (86), 75-115.

Vancouver

Eggert B. Danske stednavne på -lund: Indledende studier. Norna - Rapporter. 2011;(86):75-115.

Author

Eggert, Birgit. / Danske stednavne på -lund : Indledende studier. I: Norna - Rapporter. 2011 ; Nr. 86. s. 75-115.

Bibtex

@article{2b40cb081f4c427f91b1f87185f0c21d,
title = "Danske stednavne p{\aa} -lund: Indledende studier",
abstract = "Hitherto, only short presentations of Danish lund-names have been written, usually giving a picture of the lund-names as a very old name type, i.e. because they can be connected to the Old Norse religion through qualifiers that consist of the names of heathen gods. This survey, however, shows that most of the Danish lund-names are relatively young, dating back to the late Viking Age and the Middle Ages, and some even younger than that. The survey shows huge inequalities within the group of Danish lund-names. This becomes very clear when comparing taxes for settlements denoted with other generics in King Christian V's land register from 1688. The lund-settlements in Sj{\ae}lland and Lolland-Falster pay taxes as high as settlements denoted with Iron Age nametypes; therefore they must be just as old. The lund-settlements in Jylland seem to be a great deal younger; they pay taxes similar to those paid by settlements denoted with name-types from the late Viking Age and the Middle Ages. When comparing the distribution of the lund-names in this survey with the distribution of names in -torp a very interesting picture is revealed (figs. 2 and 4). It seems that the lund-names fill out an area in the middle of central Jylland where there are few torp-names. Moor is dominant in that area, and maybe small woods were so significant there that this has been stressed in the names rather than the type of settlements they were. There are no linguistic conditions in the names in this survey that can prove undoubtedly that the names are older than the early Middle Ages. However, there are certain examples of Nordic godnames among the qualifiers, but a number of factors argue against a general understanding of the lund-names as sacred: only 2,4 % of the names in this survey are certainly sacred, the age differences within the group of lund-names are large, and a lot of the settlements denoted with lund-names are so small and insignificant that they cannot have had any particular importance at any time.",
author = "Birgit Eggert",
note = "Redigeret af Lisbeth Eilergaard Christensen & Bent J{\o}rgensen",
year = "2011",
language = "Dansk",
pages = "75--115",
journal = "Norna - Rapporter",
issn = "0346-6728",
publisher = "Norna-Foerlaget",
number = "86",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Danske stednavne på -lund

T2 - Indledende studier

AU - Eggert, Birgit

N1 - Redigeret af Lisbeth Eilergaard Christensen & Bent Jørgensen

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - Hitherto, only short presentations of Danish lund-names have been written, usually giving a picture of the lund-names as a very old name type, i.e. because they can be connected to the Old Norse religion through qualifiers that consist of the names of heathen gods. This survey, however, shows that most of the Danish lund-names are relatively young, dating back to the late Viking Age and the Middle Ages, and some even younger than that. The survey shows huge inequalities within the group of Danish lund-names. This becomes very clear when comparing taxes for settlements denoted with other generics in King Christian V's land register from 1688. The lund-settlements in Sjælland and Lolland-Falster pay taxes as high as settlements denoted with Iron Age nametypes; therefore they must be just as old. The lund-settlements in Jylland seem to be a great deal younger; they pay taxes similar to those paid by settlements denoted with name-types from the late Viking Age and the Middle Ages. When comparing the distribution of the lund-names in this survey with the distribution of names in -torp a very interesting picture is revealed (figs. 2 and 4). It seems that the lund-names fill out an area in the middle of central Jylland where there are few torp-names. Moor is dominant in that area, and maybe small woods were so significant there that this has been stressed in the names rather than the type of settlements they were. There are no linguistic conditions in the names in this survey that can prove undoubtedly that the names are older than the early Middle Ages. However, there are certain examples of Nordic godnames among the qualifiers, but a number of factors argue against a general understanding of the lund-names as sacred: only 2,4 % of the names in this survey are certainly sacred, the age differences within the group of lund-names are large, and a lot of the settlements denoted with lund-names are so small and insignificant that they cannot have had any particular importance at any time.

AB - Hitherto, only short presentations of Danish lund-names have been written, usually giving a picture of the lund-names as a very old name type, i.e. because they can be connected to the Old Norse religion through qualifiers that consist of the names of heathen gods. This survey, however, shows that most of the Danish lund-names are relatively young, dating back to the late Viking Age and the Middle Ages, and some even younger than that. The survey shows huge inequalities within the group of Danish lund-names. This becomes very clear when comparing taxes for settlements denoted with other generics in King Christian V's land register from 1688. The lund-settlements in Sjælland and Lolland-Falster pay taxes as high as settlements denoted with Iron Age nametypes; therefore they must be just as old. The lund-settlements in Jylland seem to be a great deal younger; they pay taxes similar to those paid by settlements denoted with name-types from the late Viking Age and the Middle Ages. When comparing the distribution of the lund-names in this survey with the distribution of names in -torp a very interesting picture is revealed (figs. 2 and 4). It seems that the lund-names fill out an area in the middle of central Jylland where there are few torp-names. Moor is dominant in that area, and maybe small woods were so significant there that this has been stressed in the names rather than the type of settlements they were. There are no linguistic conditions in the names in this survey that can prove undoubtedly that the names are older than the early Middle Ages. However, there are certain examples of Nordic godnames among the qualifiers, but a number of factors argue against a general understanding of the lund-names as sacred: only 2,4 % of the names in this survey are certainly sacred, the age differences within the group of lund-names are large, and a lot of the settlements denoted with lund-names are so small and insignificant that they cannot have had any particular importance at any time.

M3 - Tidsskriftartikel

SP - 75

EP - 115

JO - Norna - Rapporter

JF - Norna - Rapporter

SN - 0346-6728

IS - 86

ER -

ID: 33267270