Sunday, September 28, 2025

XIV National Conference of Toponomastica femminile + 1st International Conference on Inclusive Toponymy

 “Tutta mia la città”: naming cities, opening maps

Dates: 23–24 October 2025 • Place: Rome (Roma Tre University, Department of Education – Aula Volpi, Via del Castro Pretorio, 20)
Event: XIV National Conference of Toponomastica femminile + 1st International Conference on Inclusive Toponymy

A colorful, pixel-art skyline on the official poster sets the tone: streets, squares, and parks don’t just organize a city - they tell its story. Under the banner “Tutta mia la città”, scholars, practitioners, and city officials will gather in Rome to rethink how we name the places we live in and how those names can better reflect communities in all their diversity.

What’s on the agenda

  • Toponymy & public memory: who is commemorated, who is missing, and how to repair gaps.

  • Projects with public bodies: methods, partnerships, and policy pathways.

  • A European outlook: comparing inclusive naming practices across countries.

  • Stereotypes & visual languages: how imagery and signage shape perception.

  • Cities, gender & media: telling new urban stories and tracking their impact.

Across two full days (9:00–18:00), the meeting combines research talks with case studies from Italian and European cities, focusing on gender-aware and inclusive language and on new urban maps that make room for the many identities that build a city every day.

If you care about place names, public memory, and equitable mapping, don’t miss it.


Post del blog — Italiano

“Tutta mia la città”: nomi, memoria e nuove mappe urbane

Date: 23–24 ottobre 2025 • Luogo: Roma (Università Roma Tre, Dipartimento di Scienze della Formazione – Aula Volpi, via del Castro Pretorio, 20)
Evento: XIV Convegno nazionale di Toponomastica femminile + I Convegno internazionale di Toponomastica inclusiva

Il manifesto, con una città ricamata in pixel colorati, dice già tutto: vie, piazze e parchi non sono solo coordinate—sono memoria pubblica. Con “Tutta mia la città”, ricercatrici e ricercatori, operatrici e operatori culturali, insieme a rappresentanti delle istituzioni, si incontrano a Roma per ripensare i nomi dei luoghi e costruire mappe più inclusive.

Temi in programma

  • Toponomastica e memoria pubblica: chi ricordiamo, chi manca e come colmare i vuoti.

  • Progetti e rapporti con enti pubblici: strumenti, collaborazioni e politiche.

  • Sguardo europeo: pratiche a confronto oltre i confini nazionali.

  • Stereotipi e linguaggi visivi: segnaletica, immagini e immaginari urbani.

  • Città, genere e media: nuove narrazioni e misurazione degli impatti.

In due giornate (9:00–18:00), relazioni e casi studio mostreranno come un linguaggio attento al genere e all’inclusione possa trasformare la carta della città e, con essa, la nostra esperienza degli spazi.

Se vi interessano i nomi dei luoghi, la memoria e la giustizia spaziale, non mancate!

Saturday, September 27, 2025

NORNA's travel grant for the Reykjavík symposium

 

The Nordic Cooperative Committee for Onomastic Research (NORNA) announces one (1) travel grant for early-career name scholars wishing to attend the NORNA symposium “Namn och
kulturarv”
in Reykjavík, 19–21 May 2026.

  • What it covers: travel and accommodation up to SEK 8,000.

  • Who can apply: master’s or doctoral students without institutional funding who will present a paper at the symposium.

For full details on eligibility and how to apply, see the attached PDF.


NORNA-stipend for deltaking på symposiet i Reykjavík

Nordisk samarbeidskomité for namnegransking (NORNA) lyser ut eitt (1) reisestipend for unge namneforskarar som vil delta på NORNA-symposiet «Namn och kulturarv» i Reykjavík 19.–21. mai 2026.

  • Dekning: reise- og buutgifter inntil 8 000 SEK.

  • Kven kan søkje: master- eller doktorgradsstudentar utan institusjonell finansiering som skal halda innlegg på symposiet.

For meir informasjon om vilkår og søknadsprosedyre, sjå vedlagd PDF.

Thursday, September 25, 2025

Welsh Place-Name Society Annual Conference 2025 (Hybrid)

Venue: University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh and Celtic Studies, National Library of Wales, Aberystwyth (SY23 3HH) — and online

Host: Cymdeithas Enwau Lleoedd Cymru / Welsh Place-Name Society
Registration & tea/coffee: 10:00 · Welcome: 10:30
Translation: Talks marked * are delivered in Welsh; simultaneous Welsh→English translation is available online.
Lunch: Pen Dinas café (NLW). Travel info via Traveline Cymru; taxis by the station; ~20 minutes on foot to the Centre.





Programme & short notes

10:40–11:20 — Naomi Jones*
Enwau sy’n deillio o’r tir ac o’r bobl: casglu a safoni enwau tirweddol Parc Cenedlaethol Eryri
Names rooted in the land and people: collecting and standardizing the landscape names of Eryri National Park
Comment: A field-to-archive look at how community knowledge feeds official name standards in a protected landscape.

11:20–12:00 — Thomas Clancy
Authority and authenticity in place-names: some reflections from the Iona’s Namescape project
Comment: What counts as “authentic” in a multilingual island record - methodological lessons from Iona.

12:00–12:40 — Meirion Davies*
Caeau’n dweud hanes: atgofion llafar a thystiolaeth ddogfennol / Fields which tell a story: oral memories and documentary evidence
Comment: How oral history and documents meet on the map - micro-toponyms as memory keepers.

12:40–1:50 — Lunch (Pen Dinas café, NLW)
1:50 — Reconvene at the Centre

2:00–2:40 — Jenny Day*
Y llyn, y llan, y glyn a’r Groes Hen: olrhain enwau amryfal abaty Glyn-y-groes / Tracing the various names of Valle Crucis Abbey
Comment: One medieval site, many names - tracing layers of devotion, landscape and language.

2:40–3:20 — Nigel Beidas
Sheepfolds of the Carneddau
Comment: Reading upland husbandry through names - what sheepfold toponyms reveal about the Carneddau.

3:20 — Close of Conference

Contacts: enwaulleoedd@gmail.com · Website & social links on the Society’s poster.
Note: Registration is required; places are limited both at the Centre and online (first-come, first-served).


Cynhadledd Flynyddol Cymdeithas Enwau Lleoedd Cymru - 4 Hydref 2025 (Hybrid)

Lleoliad: Canolfan Uwchefrydiau Cymreig a Cheltaidd Prifysgol Cymru, Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru, Aberystwyth (SY23 3HH) - a thrwy’r we
Cofrestru a the/coffi: 10:00 · Croeso: 10:30
Cyfieithu: Sesiynau â seren * yn Gymraeg; darperir cyfieithu ar-y-pryd o’r Gymraeg i’r Saesneg ar-lein yn unig.
Cinio: Caffi Pen Dinas (LGC). Gwybodaeth teithio: Traveline Cymru; tacsis wrth yr orsaf; tua 20 munud i gerdded i’r Ganolfan.

Rhaglen a nodiadau byr

10:40–11:20 — Naomi Jones*
Enwau sy’n deillio o’r tir ac o’r bobl: casglu a safoni enwau tirweddol Parc Cenedlaethol Eryri
Nodyn: O’r maes i’r safon - sut mae gwybodaeth gymunedol yn bwydo cofnodion swyddogol.

11:20–12:00 — Thomas Clancy
Authority and authenticity in place-names: some reflections from the Iona’s Namescape project
Nodyn: “Awdurdod” ac “awthentigrwydd” mewn cofnodion amlieithog - gwersi o Ynys Iona.

12:00–12:40 — Meirion Davies*
Caeau’n dweud hanes: atgofion llafar a thystiolaeth ddogfennol
Nodyn: Sut mae hanes llafar a thystiolaeth ar bapur yn cyfarfod ar y map - micro-doponymau fel cadwraeth atgof.

12:40–1:50 — Cinio (caffi Pen Dinas, LGC)
1:50 — Ailymgynnull yn y Ganolfan

2:00–2:40 — Jenny Day*
Y llyn, y llan, y glyn a’r Groes Hen: olrhain enwau amryfal abaty Glyn-y-groes
Nodyn: Un safle canoloesol, nifer o enwau - haenau ffydd, tirwedd a iaith.

2:40–3:20 — Nigel Beidas
Sheepfolds of the Carneddau
Nodyn: Darllen tir pori mynydd trwy enwau - beth mae toponymau beudai defaid yn ei ddangos am y Carneddau.

3:20 — Cau’r Gynhadledd

Cyswllt: enwaulleoedd@gmail.com · Gwefan a chyfrifon cyfryngau cymdeithasol ar boster y Gymdeithas.
Nodyn: Rhaid cofrestru; llefydd cyfyngedig yn y Ganolfan ac ar-lein (yn ôl y drefn gofrestru).

Wednesday, September 24, 2025

Preview of the XXIV International and National Onomastic Conference (MiOKO)

 Venue: spinPLACE (Bankowa 5), Katowice, Poland. 

Host: University of Silesia, with the Polish Academy of Sciences and the Agere Aude Foundation. 

Theme: Proper Names in Text and Discourse.

Thursday, 25 Sept - Plenaries set the tone

  • Mariusz Rutkowski (UWM Olsztyn): Prolegomena to the Onomastics of Memory - a conceptual opening on how names structure collective remembrance.

  • Urszula Bijak (IJP PAN): Toponymy and Ecolinguistics - linking place-names to environmental frames.

  • Artur Gałkowski (UŁ): Onomaturgy as Discourse-Engaged Name-Making - on creative naming as a social act.

  • Ewa Młynarczyk (UKEN Kraków): Trends in Polish Socio-ideonyms of Charity - labels of benevolence and identity.

  • M. Rutkiewicz-Hanczewska & J. Walkowiak (UAM): Hotel Names in Poland, Past to Present - an urbo-chrematonymy tour.

  • Pavol Odaloš (UMB Banská Bystrica): Modelovanie a modely montanonym v Banskej Štiavnici - mining heritage through mountain names.

Parallel sessions (15:30–17:00)

S1 – Names in popular culture & unofficial maps

  • Magdalena Graf (UAM): Serious play with names in pop culture - on onymic games.

  • Iwona Nobis (IJP PAN): “I live in Fat Woman” - non-map toponyms - folk toponyms in local talk.

S2 – Anthroponyms across time

  • Iza Matusiak-Kempa (UWM): Stability and change in personal naming systems - a comparative, pragmatic view.

  • Michał Mordań (UwB): Dyneburg Polish surnames with -ski/-ska, 1945–1991 - Slavic suffixes in flux.

S3 – Names in public discourse & health

  • Mirosława Sagan-Bielawa (UJ): Volhynia as an ideonym - geopolitics and school memory.

  • Małgorzata Magda-Czekaj (IJP PAN): Disease names as proper names - where medicine meets onomastics.

S4 – Religious chrematonymy & media

  • Ewa Horyń & Ewa Zmuda (UKEN): Names of religious shops/firms in Poland.

  • Halszka Górny (IJP PAN): Onymic markers in socio-cultural e-magazines.

(17:15) Meeting: Slavic Onomastics Commission & PAN Onomastic Commission.

Friday, 26 Sept - Methods, corpora, discourse

Morning sessions (9:00–10:00)

S1 – Memory & identity

  • Beata Duda & Ewa Ficek (UŚ): Names as markers of insurgent memory (Warsaw Uprising testimonies).

  • Tomasz Jelonek (UJ): Minor sacral architecture names as rural memory sites.

S2 – Anthroponyms & sound change

  • Zenon Lica (UG): Traces of the Second Germanic Sound Shift in Polish surnames of German origin.

  • Andrzej Chludziński (JASNE): Occupational by-names in a 1406–1528 register (part 2: M–Z).  


S3 – Literary onomastics & AI
  • Paweł Graf (UAM): Polish literary onomastics in the history of science.

  • Monika Kij (URz): AI-generated proper names for fantasy narratives - creativity vs. convention.

Late morning (11:00–12:30)

  • J. Davidová Glogarová, J. David, M. Maléř (Ostrava): Corpus-based lexicon of proper-name metaphors.

  • Anna Szczęsny (UW): “Tambo vs. Bambo” - culturally loaded anthroponyms in translation.

  • Katalin Török (UW): Trendy diet titles in Hungarian/Polish book markets.

  • E. Szkudlarek-Śmiechowicz, R. Zarębski, K. Burska (UŁ): Digital database of Polish field-names.

  • Agnieszka Gasz (UŚ): Chekhov in Silesian - translating literary names.

  • Agnieszka Kołodziej (UWr): Naming alpacas and donkeys - a playful taxonomy.

  • Agata Reclik (Ostrava): Czech/Polish toponyms in InterCorp.

  • Łukasz Trzeciak (UP Słupsk): Anthroponyms in Polish/Russian translations of Hagop Baronian.

  • H. Duszyński-Karabasz (UKW): Lottery scratch-card names.

Early afternoon (13:00–14:30)

  • Magdalena Steciąg (UZ): “Oder” in 2022 eco-disaster coverage - reframing a river’s name.

  • Marta Nowak & Ewa Nowak-Pasterska (Ljubljana/UAM): Eponymic expressions in L2 Polish.

  • Beata Jędrzejczak (UG): Titles in contemporary Polish crime fiction.

  • Beata Drabik (UJ): Names as weapons in (not only) political eristic.

  • I. Kotlarska & J. Przyklenk (UZ/UŚ): Names shaping an Anglo-Saxon cultural image (interwar GL teaching discourse).

  • Radosław Marcinkiewicz (UO): Discography as an onomasticon.

  • A. Naruszewicz-Duchlińska (UWM): Onyms in spam - deception by naming.

  • Darius Ivoška (Institute of the Lithuanian Language): Text/context in historical onomasticon.

  • Ewa Kubusiak (UJ): Polish metal band names and fan-community reception.

Late afternoon (15:30–16:30)

  • Rafał Mazur (UJ): Periphrases of proper names in media on the Russia–Ukraine war.

  • Łukasz Karpecki (IJP PAN): Interactive visualization tool for toponymic change.

  • Włodzimierz Wysoczański (UWr): Work-motivated nicknames in dialect discourse.

  • Victoriia Husak (Inst. of the Lithuanian Language): Ukrainian hodonyms in the independence period.

  • Almasbek Absadyq & Gulnara Bekenova (Union of Onomasts): Toponymic landscape of Kazakhstan’s Kostanay Region.

  • Agata Łojek (UW): Why early modern proto-surnames vary (linguistic, dialectal, orthographic causes).

16:10–16:30 / wrap-ups

  • Beata Afeltowicz (USz): Szczecin periphrases.

  • Gulnara Bekenova & Zhanar Akmetova (Union of Onomasts): From colonial to national - changing Kazakhstani toponymies.

Saturday, 27 Sept - Names across communities and genres

Morning sessions (9:00–10:00)

  • Magdalena Hawrysz (UZ): Names of oncology support organizations.

  • Adam Siwiec (UMCS): Populating fictional worlds - personal names and textual/discursive rules.

  • Danuta Lech-Kirstein (UO): Dish names on menus - genre norms vs. creative variants.

  • Barbara Drozd (URz): Names in medical discourse (expert & popular science).

  • T. Klemensová & J. Davidová Glogarová (Ostrava): Proprial world of Czech postmodernism.

  • Jarmila Mádrová (Ostrava): Speleonyms in tourist-text translation (“Doughnut Hall” etc.).

  • Ewelina Zając (UŁ): Proper names in children’s verbal fluency studies.

  • Alicja Przybylska (UAM): The names of Świetlicki - poetic identity through onyms.

  • M. Bortliczek & I. Łuc (UŚ): Metaphoric/allusive/abstract names of Upper-Silesian eateries.

Final plenaries (11:00–13:30)

  • Jaromír Krško (UMB): Language view of the world and nicknames in Orava - folk ethno-onymy.

  • Katarzyna Skowronek & Alicja Głębocka (AGH): Onyms in Polish rap - text-, world-, and bond-building roles.

  • Renata Przybylska (UJ): Restaurant/café names as carriers of values in culinary discourse.

  • Artur Rejter (UŚ): Creative texts as objects for discourse onomastics.




Polish / Po polsku - Przewodnik po programie

Miejsce: spinPLACE, Katowice. Hasło przewodnie: nazwy własne w tekście i dyskursie.

Czwartek, 25 IX - Plenarne wprowadzenia

  • M. Rutkowski: Prolegomena do onomastyki pamięci - ramy teoretyczne dla badań pamięci.

  • U. Bijak: Toponimia a ekolingwistyka - nazwy miejsc w perspektywie środowiskowej.

  • A. Gałkowski: Onomaturgia jako proces dyskursywnie zaangażowany - kreatywność nazewnicza jako działanie społeczne.

  • E. Młynarczyk: Tendencje w socjoideonimii dobroczynności.

  • M. Rutkiewicz-Hanczewska & J. Walkowiak: Nazwy hoteli w Polsce - dawniej i dziś.

  • P. Odaloš: Modelovanie montanonym v Banskej Štiavnici - górnicze dziedzictwo w nazwach.

Równoległe sekcje (15:30–17:00) - popkultura i toponimy niemapowe (S1), antroponimia w czasie (S2), nazwy w dyskursie publicznym i medycznym (S3), chrematonimia religijna i onimy w mediach (S4).

Piątek, 26 IX - Metody, korpusy, dyskurs

  • Rano: pamięć powstańcza; ślady drugiej przesuwki w nazwiskach; literacka onomastyka i nazwy tworzone przez AI.

  • Po 11:00: korpusy i słowniki metafor, antroponimy nacechowane kulturowo w przekładzie, tytuły dietetyczne, cyfrowa baza mikrotoponimów, przekład nazw u Czechowa, nazwy alpak i osłów (!), toponimy w InterCorp, antroponimy u Baroniana, nazwy zdrapek.

  • Po 13:00: „Oder” w doniesieniach ekologicznych 2022, eponimy w glottodydaktyce, tytuły kryminałów, onimy jako oręż w sporach, obraz kultury anglosaskiej w międzywojniu, dyskografia jako onomastykon, onimy w spamerstwie, metodologia onomastykonu historycznego, nazwy zespołów metalowych.

  • Po 15:30: peryfrazy nazw własnych w relacjach o wojnie, narzędzie do wizualizacji danych toponimicznych, przezwiska zawodowe w gwarze; dalej: hodonimy ukraińskie, krajobraz toponimiczny obwodu kustanajskiego (Kazachstan), oraz zmienność proto-nazwisk (XVII–XIX w.).

  • Zakończenie: peryfrazy szczecińskie; From Colonial to National o przemianach kazachstańskiej toponimii.

Sobota, 27 IX - Nazwy w społecznościach i gatunkach

  • Rano: nazwy organizacji wspierających onkopacjentów; zaludnianie światów fikcyjnych; nazwy potraw; nazwy w dyskursie medycznym; proprialny świat czeskiej postmoderny; speleonimy w przekładach przewodników; onimy w badaniach fluencji dzieci; onimy u Świetlickiego; nazwy lokali na Górnym Śląsku.

  • Plenaria finałowe: przezwiska na Orawie; onimy w polskim rapie (funkcje tekstotwórcze/światotwórcze/więzotwórcze); nazwy lokali jako nośniki wartości; teksty kreacyjne a onomastyka dyskursu.

Tuesday, September 23, 2025

Workshop on Onomastic Studies at the Indian Museum

 The Indian Museum (Ministry of Culture, Government of India) is hosting a Workshop on Onomastic Studies on Friday, September 26, 2025, 2:30 PM onwards, at ABC Hall, Indian Museum, Kolkata. The session will be led by Prof. Susmita Basu Majumdar, Professor in the Department of Ancient Indian History and Culture.

This workshop is a prelude to two milestones in India’s name-studies and inscriptional research communities: the Golden Jubilee Session of the Epigraphical Society of India and the 44th Session of the Place Names Society of India. It’s a timely gathering at the crossroads of onomastics (the study of names) and epigraphy (the study of inscriptions), two fields that often meet on stone, copper, palm leaf - and increasingly, in digital maps and gazetteers.

Why onomastics - and why now?

  • Names as evidence. Place-names and personal names preserve strata of history - languages, routes, rulers, ecology. Reading them well can change how we date sites or reconstruct settlement patterns.

  • Epigraphy’s bridge. Inscriptions don’t just record events; they anchor names in time and space, providing the hard data that lets scholars trace continuity and change.

  • Maps and data. From district gazetteers to OpenStreetMap, consistent name standards matter for governance, heritage signage, and public memory.

What to expect

While the final program is announced on-site, attendees can expect:

  • An accessible introduction to onomastic method - how scholars analyze and interpret names.

  • Case vignettes from Indian epigraphy and historical geography (e.g., how a toponym travels across scripts or centuries).

  • Discussion on standards and sources - gazetteers, museum records, archives, and field protocols.

  • A look ahead to the Golden Jubilee of the Epigraphical Society of India and the 44th Session of the Place Names Society of India - and how students and researchers can plug in.

Who should attend

Students and researchers in history, archaeology, linguistics, geography, museum studies, as well as heritage professionals, librarians, and mapping enthusiasts. No specialist background required - curiosity about names and places is enough.

Event details at a glance

  • Title: Workshop on Onomastic Studies

  • Date & Time: September 26, 2025, 2:30 PM onwards

  • Venue: ABC Hall, Indian Museum, Kolkata

  • Speaker: Prof. Susmita Basu Majumdar, Professor, Dept. of Ancient Indian History & Culture

  • Presented by: Indian Museum, Ministry of Culture, Government of India

  • Occasion: Prelude to the Golden Jubilee Session (Epigraphical Society of India) and the 44th Session (Place Names Society of India)

If you care about how names carry memory - how a village name hints at a vanished river, or how a royal title survives in a neighborhood - this workshop will be a rich, hands-on afternoon. Arrive a little early to find seating and meet fellow participants.

Monday, September 22, 2025

In Memoriam: Mikhail Gorbanevsky (1953–2025)

 On 20 September, linguistics lost one of its quiet architects. Mikhail Gorbanevsky - philologist, public intellectual, Doctor of Philology, professor of Russian and general linguistics, and long-time head of the Guild of Linguistic Experts in Documentation and Information Disputes (GLEDIS) - passed away at the age of 72.

The scholar who made names speak

Gorbanevsky’s life work stood at the crossroads of onomastics, lexicology, forensic linguistics, and language culture. To the public he was a patient explainer of how names carry memory; to scholars he was a method-builder; to practitioners he was a bridge - turning philological insight into usable standards for city planners, journalists, lawyers, editors.

As editorial board member of Jurislinguistics, adviser to Neophilology, and general director of GLEDIS, he shaped professional norms in expert testimony and defended rigorous, text-based reasoning in the courtroom. For a quarter century he also served as a consultant and expert for Gramota.ru, the principal public portal on Russian language, helping popularize linguistic knowledge across generations.

A cartographer of urban memory

Gorbanevsky’s onomastic books taught readers to “hear” cities. With H. P. Smolitskaya, he mapped the Toponymy of Moscow (1982), showing how names encode topography, economy, and faith. He then opened that world to a broad audience in In the World of Names and Appellations (1983; 2nd ed. 1987) and The Origin of Geographical Names (1983). The Moscow cycle—Names of the Land of Moscow (1985), Russian Urban Toponymy (1996), and the sweeping Moscow: Rings of Centuries (2007)—remains a model for historically grounded urban toponymy.

Two other strands were equally formative. First, literary onomastics - Onomastics in Fiction (1988) - which made visible how writers deploy names as narrative devices. Second, digital lexicography - Toponymy and Computer Lexicography (1993) and later work on computerized dictionaries - anticipating today’s searchable gazetteers and name databases.

A teacher of the public craft

Gorbanevsky’s pages are hospitable: the reader meets saints and surveyors, merchants and map-makers, all leaving traces in street names. He also wrote for schools - Tajny moskovskikh ulits (1997) and Moscovovedenie (1997) - so that a child’s first map could already be a lesson in history.

Selected onomastic works

  • Toponymy of Moscow (with G. P. Smolitskaya), 1982

  • In the World of Names and Appellations, 1983; rev. ed. 1987

  • The Origin of Geographical Names, 1983

  • Names of the Land of Moscow, 1985

  • Onomastics in Fiction: Philological Studies, 1988

  • Toponymy and Computer Lexicography (with V. V. Presnov), 1993

  • Russian Urban Toponymy: Methods of Historical-Cultural Study and Building Computer Dictionaries, 1996

  • Secrets of Moscow Streets: Toponymic Journeys, 1997

  • Moscow: Rings of Centuries. From the History of Names of Places, Districts, Streets and Lanes, 2007

  • Staraia Russa: The Secret of an Ancient Town’s Name (with R. A. Ageeva, V. L. Vasil’ev), 2002; Streets of Staraia Russa (with M. I. Emelianova), 2004; 2nd ed. 2010

Farewell

With Gorbanevsky’s passing, Russian onomastics loses a meticulous historian, generous teacher, and principled expert. His books will remain maps—not only of places, but of how names carry our collective life.

Memory eternal.


Памяти Михаила Викторовича Горбаневского (1953–2025)

20 сентября ушёл из жизни Михаил Викторович Горбаневский — филолог и общественный деятель, доктор филологических наук, профессор русского и общего языкознания, многолетний руководитель Гильдии лингвистов-экспертов по документационным и информационным спорам (ГЛЭДИС). Ему было 72 года.

Человек, который заставлял имена говорить

Его научная биография соединяет ономастику, лексикологию, лингвистическую экспертизу и культуру речи. Для широкой публики он был спокойным толкователем того, как имя хранит память; для исследователей — создателем методов; для практиков — мостом между филологией и реальной жизнью: от городской топонимики до судебной экспертизы и редакторских стандартов.

Михаил Викторович входил в редколлегию журнала «Юрислингвистика», был советником главного редактора «Неофилологии», а как генеральный директор ГЛЭДИС задавал планку профессиональной ответственности эксперта. Четверть века он оставался консультантом и экспертом портала «Грамота.ру», помогая популяризировать лингвистические знания.

Картограф городской памяти

Книги Горбаневского учат «слушать» город. Вместе с Г. П. Смолицкой он создал фундаментальный труд «Топонимия Москвы» (1982), где показал, как в названиях районов, улиц и переулков переплетаются рельеф, ремёсла, религия. Популярные издания «В мире имён и названий» (1983; 2-е изд. 1987) и «Происхождение географических названий» (1983) ввели читателя в науку о собственных именах. Московский цикл — «Имена земли Московской» (1985), «Русская городская топонимия» (1996), «Москва: кольца столетий» (2007) — стал образцом историко-культурного исследования городской топонимии.

Две линии особенно важны для наследия учёного. Первая — литературная ономастика («Ономастика в художественной литературе», 1988), где показано, как авторы конструируют мир через имена. Вторая — компьютерная лексикография («Топонимика и компьютерная лексикография», 1993; работы о компьютерных словарях, 1996), предвосхитившая современные электронные указатели и базы имён.

Учитель ремесла для всех

Его тексты гостеприимны: в них встречаются святые и землемеры, купцы и картографы — все, кто оставил след в названиях. Он писал и для школы — «Тайны московских улиц» (1997), «Москвоведение» (1997) — чтобы первая карта ребёнка уже была уроком истории.

Избранные труды по ономастике

  • Топонимия Москвы (в соавт. с Г. П. Смолицкой), 1982

  • В мире имён и названий, 1983; 2-е изд. 1987

  • Происхождение географических названий, 1983

  • Имена земли Московской, 1985

  • Ономастика в художественной литературе, 1988

  • Топонимика и компьютерная лексикография (в соавт. с В. В. Пресновым), 1993

  • Русская городская топонимия: методы историко-культурного изучения и создания компьютерных словарей, 1996

  • Тайны московских улиц: Топонимические путешествия, 1997

  • Москва: кольца столетий. Из истории названий местностей и районов, улиц и переулков столицы, 2007

  • Старая Русса: Тайны имени древнего города (в соавт.), 2002; Улицы Старой Руссы (в соавт.), 2004; 2-е изд. 2010

Прощание

С уходом Михаила Викторовича российская ономастика потеряла точного историка, щедрого наставника и принципиального эксперта. Его книги останутся картами — не только мест, но и того, как имена несут нашу общую жизнь.

Светлая память.

Восточные имена становятся популярны у детей в Шымкенте


Специалисты говорят, выбор имени напрямую зависит от моды, уровня религиозности и даже политической ситуации в стране. Эксперты в ономастике отмечают, сегодня среди казахстанцев всё большую популярность приобретают имена арабского происхождения, которых в советское время использовалось крайне мало.

Saturday, September 20, 2025

A weekend full of names: DFD at the BMFTR Open House

 The team from the Digital Family Names Dictionary of Germany (DFD) took part in the BMFTR Open House - and the response was terrific.

At their stand, visitors with surnames like Aydin, Frost, or Gül stopped by to learn more about their names: where they occur in Germany, how they spread historically, and what they mean. Those quick look-ups turned into lively conversations about language history, migration, spelling variants, and regional patterns.

A special highlight: they were delighted that Federal Minister Dorothee Bär as well as the astronauts Alexander Gerst and Ulf Merbold visited their booth to explore the stories behind their own family names.

Thank you to everyone who came by - and to the fantastic organizers at BMFTR for making the day run so smoothly. DFD would be thrilled to return next year.



Ein Wochenende voller Namen: DFD beim Tag der offenen Tür des BMFTR

Das Team des Digitalen Familiennamenwörterbuchs Deutschlands (DFD) war beim Tag der offenen Tür des BMFTR dabei – und die Resonanz war großartig.

An ihrem Stand informierten sich viele Besucherinnen und Besucher mit Nachnamen wie Aydin, Frost oder Gül über Verbreitung, Herkunft und Bedeutung ihrer Namen. Aus kurzen Nachfragen wurden spannende Gespräche über Sprachgeschichte, Migrationswege, Schreibvarianten und regionale Muster.

Ein besonderes Highlight: Bundesministerin Dorothee Bär sowie die Astronauten Alexander Gerst und Ulf Merbold schauten bei ihnen vorbei und ließen sich die Hintergründe ihrer Familiennamen erklären.

Ein herzliches Dankeschön an alle, die dabei waren – und an die hervorragende Organisation im BMFTR. Nächstes Jahr ist DFD sehr gern wieder dabei.



Panel spotlight at the LIV Simposio: The Morphosyntax of Proper Names


Dates:
26–29 January 2026

Venue: CSIC – Centro de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales, Madrid (Spain)
Panel coordinator / contact: Javier Caro-Reina (University of Cologne) — javier.caroreina@uni-koeln.de
Submission deadline: 30 September 2025
Event hub: SEL’s official symposium page.

Why this panel matters

Proper names don’t behave like ordinary nouns - and not always in the same way across languages. Over the last decade, typologists, morphologists, and sociolinguists have shown that names (anthroponyms, toponyms, kin terms in name-like uses, hypocoristics) can follow their own grammatical logics. Some scholars speak of a Special Onymic Grammar (SOG), and even propose distinct anthroponymic vs. toponymic subgrammars. The Madrid 2026 SEL panel gathers these strands into a focused conversation across syntax, morphology, typology, diachrony, and variation.

Core themes highlighted in the call

  • Definite article with names. From rivers and countries to personal names, distribution patterns reflect grammaticalization and pragmaticalization pathways that vary by language and variety (e.g., Romance).

  • Gender with proper names. Beyond phonology or lexical class, some subclasses (e.g., river names) inherit gender from hyperonyms (e.g., río → masculine), while city names may vary (Madrid es bonito/bonita).

  • Differential Object Marking (DOM). Names sit at the high-referential end; Old Spanish shows robust DOM with personal names and more flexibility with place names and definite NPs.

  • Hypocoristics. Productive derivational patterns, regionally and socially conditioned.

  • Kinship terms in name-like function. Mamá/papá in European Spanish pattern like proper names (no article), versus madre/padre as common nouns (take the article).

  • Spatial relations and place names. Asymmetric coding for locative/allative/ablative roles (short/zero marking vs. longer adpositional coding).

The panel sits within the official program of SEL’s 2026 symposium at the CSIC campus in Madrid, with submission and registration handled via the SEL site.

Suggested angles for abstracts (20-minute talks)

  • Cross-linguistic contrasts in article use with personal names (e.g., Italo-Romance vs. Ibero-Romance vs. Germanic), including contact-induced change in bilingual communities.

  • Gender assignment algorithms for toponyms: hyperonym inheritance vs. phonological/semantic override, with corpus evidence.

  • DOM at the onymic edge: animacy, definiteness, affectedness, and topicality with named referents in historical corpora.

  • Hypocoristic morphology as social indexicality: quantitative studies of suffix productivity across regions/periods.

  • Kin terms as “quasi-names” in syntax and morpho-pragmatics (case, possession, determiner behavior).

  • Micro-typology of place-relational marking: zero vs. overt strategies with named locations.

Who should consider submitting?

Linguists working in morphosyntax, typology, historical linguistics, sociolinguistics, language contact, and computational/annotation pipelines for named entities. Empirical domains may include Romance and beyond (Austronesian, Slavic, Germanic, Iranian, etc.), as the panel foregrounds cross-linguistic comparability.

How to submit

  • Format: 20-minute oral presentations.

  • Language: English or Spanish.

  • Where: Use the abstract template (“plantilla para el envío de propuestas”) and submit via SEL’s registration page.

  • Deadline: 30 September 2025.

Practicalities - fees, timelines, and venue - are centralized on the SEL 2026 site (Presentation, Important Dates, Registration/Fees).

Reading list to get you started

The call situates itself against a growing body of work. A few anchor references mentioned in the announcement:

  • Ackermann & Schlücker (eds.) 2017 — Folia Linguistica special issue on the morphosyntax of proper names.

  • Dammel & Handschuh (eds.) 2019 — Language Typology and Universals special issue, Grammar of Names.

  • Caro-Reina & Helmbrecht (eds.) 2022 — Proper names versus common nouns (De Gruyter Mouton), incl. Caro-Reina (2022) on articles with personal names in Romance.

  • Laca 2006 — DOM in Old Spanish.

  • Dahl & Koptjevskaja-Tamm 2001 — kinship in grammar.

  • Stolz, Lestrade & Stolz 2014 — zero-marking of spatial relations.

  • Haspelmath 2019 — differential place/object marking.

  • Stolz & Levkovych 2022; Stolz & Nintemann 2024 — Special Onymic Grammar in typological perspective.

Key dates (at a glance)

  • Abstract deadline: 30 September 2025

  • Symposium: 26–29 January 2026 (Madrid, CSIC-CCHS)

  • Registration windows / fees: see SEL’s “Cuotas e inscripción.”

Why Madrid 2026 is a timely forum

The panel’s focus mirrors a broader shift in linguistics: grammatical architecture must account for name-specific behavior. Whether your data come from medieval corpora, modern conversational speech, or multilingual contact zones, names provide a stress test for theories of definiteness, agreement, case, argument structure, and indexicality. Bringing this discussion to SEL’s long-running symposium ensures a vibrant mix of Romance specialists and typologists, with Madrid offering a hub for collaborations that cross subfields.

______________________________________________________________________________

Panel en el LIV Simposio de la Sociedad Española de Lingüística (SEL): La morfosintaxis de los nombres propios

Fechas: 26–29 de enero de 2026
Sede: CSIC – Centro de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales, Madrid (España)
Coordinación / contacto: Javier Caro-Reina (Universität zu Köln) — javier.caroreina@uni-koeln.de
Plazo de envío de resúmenes: 30 de septiembre de 2025
Información general y registro: sitio oficial del LIV Simposio SEL (Madrid 2026)

¿Por qué este panel es relevante?

Los nombres propios no se comportan siempre como los sustantivos comunes, y sus pautas varían entre lenguas y variedades. La investigación reciente ha mostrado que los antropónimos, topónimos, hipocorísticos y ciertos términos de parentesco siguen lógicas gramaticales específicas. Se habla incluso de una Gramática Ónimica Especial (SOG) y, en algunos enfoques, de gramáticas específicas antroponímica y toponímica. El panel de Madrid reúne perspectivas de sintaxis, morfología, tipología, diacronía y variación para avanzar en una caracterización comparada y basada en datos.

Ejes temáticos del llamado

  • Artículo definido con nombres. La distribución del artículo con topónimos (ríos, países…) sugiere rutas de gramaticalización; con antropónimos, intervienen procesos de pragmaticalización donde pesan factores semántico-pragmáticos, léxicos, morfosintácticos y sociolingüísticos según la variedad.

  • Género en nombres propios. Más allá de reglas fonológicas o léxicas, ciertos subconjuntos (p. ej., nombres de ríos) heredan género del hiperónimo (río → masculino), mientras que los nombres de ciudades pueden fluctuar (Madrid es bonito / Madrid es bonita).

  • Marcación diferencial del objeto (DOM). Los nombres tienden al extremo alto de referencialidad: en español antiguo la DOM es robusta con antropónimos y más flexible con topónimos y SN definidos humanos.

  • Hipocorísticos. Alta productividad de sufijos con condicionamientos diatópicos y sociofonológicos; terreno ideal para estudios cuantitativos.

  • Términos de parentesco “en función onímica”. Dobletes como mamá/papá (comportamiento de nombre propio, sin artículo) frente a madre/padre (sustantivos comunes con artículo) permiten poner a prueba la interfaz léxico-sintaxis.

  • Relaciones espaciales con topónimos. Codificación asimétrica de locativo, alativo y ablativo: acortamientos, marcación cero o alternancias preposicionales que distinguen nombres propios de sustantivos comunes.

El panel forma parte del programa oficial del Simposio SEL 2026 en la sede del CSIC (Madrid). La gestión de envíos y la inscripción se realizan en el sitio web del simposio.

Sugerencias de enfoque para resúmenes (comunicaciones de 20 minutos)

  • Contrastes interlingüísticos en el uso de artículo con antropónimos (italorromance vs. iberorromance vs. germánico), incluyendo cambios por contacto.

  • Algoritmos de asignación de género para topónimos: herencia del hiperónimo vs. anulación fonológica/semántica, con evidencia de corpus.

  • DOM en el borde onímico: animacidad, (in)definitud, afectación y topicalidad con referentes nombrados en corpora históricos.

  • Morfología de hipocorísticos como índice social: productividad de sufijos por regiones/épocas y correlatos pragmáticos.

  • Parentesco como “cuasi-nombre”: caso, posesión, determinación y pruebas diagnósticas.

  • Microtipología de la marcación espacial en topónimos: estrategias de marcación cero vs. marcación plena.

¿Quién debería enviar propuesta?

Investigadores en morfosintaxis, tipología, lingüística histórica, sociolingüística, así como en procesamiento computacional/anotación de entidades con nombre. Aunque el foco natural es el espacio románico, se anima la comparabilidad interlingüística (austronesio, eslavo, germánico, iranio, etc.).

Cómo enviar tu resumen

  • Formato: comunicación oral de 20 minutos.

  • Idiomas: español o inglés.

  • Procedimiento: descargar la plantilla para el envío de propuestas y remitir el resumen a través de la página de inscripción del simposio.

  • Fecha límite: 30 de septiembre de 2025.

Lecturas de partida (selección citada en la convocatoria)

  • Ackermann & Schlücker (eds.) 2017 — monográfico en Folia Linguistica sobre morfosintaxis de nombres propios.

  • Dammel & Handschuh (eds.) 2019 — monográfico Grammar of Names en Language Typology and Universals.

  • Caro-Reina & Helmbrecht (eds.) 2022Proper names versus common nouns (De Gruyter Mouton); incluye Caro-Reina (2022) sobre artículo con antropónimos en lenguas romances.

  • Laca 2006 — objeto directo preposicional en la historia del español.

  • Dahl & Koptjevskaja-Tamm 2001 — parentesco en la gramática.

  • Stolz, Lestrade & Stolz 2014 — marcación cero de relaciones espaciales.

  • Haspelmath 2019 — marcación diferencial de lugar y de objeto.

  • Stolz & Levkovych 2022; Stolz & Nintemann 2024 — gramática óminica especial en perspectiva tipológica.

Fechas clave (resumen)

  • Envío de resúmenes: hasta 30 de septiembre de 2025

  • Celebración del simposio: 26–29 de enero de 2026, Madrid (CSIC-CCHS)

  • Inscripción y cuotas: consultar “Cuotas e inscripción” en el sitio del simposio.

Por qué Madrid 2026 llega en el momento justo

El panel refleja un giro más amplio en la teoría gramatical: los modelos necesitan dar cuenta del comportamiento específico de los nombres propios. Desde textos medievales hasta habla espontánea y zonas de contacto multilingüe, los nombres ponen a prueba las hipótesis sobre definitud, concordancia, caso, estructura argumental e indexicalidad. El foro de SEL, con su mezcla de especialistas en románicas y tipólogos, es la ocasión ideal para impulsar colaboraciones y fijar una agenda comparativa para los próximos años.