Naming Guides
In-depth articles about naming traditions across Asian cultures
Evolution of Korean Surnames
From Three Kingdoms to Modern Korea
Korean surnames evolved from an aristocratic privilege in the Three Kingdoms era to a universal system shaped by Joseon-era registration laws and the mass adoption of common surnames by freed commoners, explaining why just three names cover nearly half the population today.
Bǎijiāxìng: The Hundred Family Surnames of China
A Thousand-Year Catalog That Defined Chinese Identity
The Bǎijiāxìng — compiled in the Song dynasty and memorized by Chinese schoolchildren for a thousand years — shaped how Chinese surnames are perceived, ordered, and culturally understood, with its opening surname Zhao reflecting the emperor's political primacy.
The History of Japanese Surnames
From Nobles to Commoners
Japan's unparalleled surname diversity — over 100,000 unique family names — resulted from the 1870 Meiji Restoration decree requiring all citizens to adopt surnames simultaneously, producing a creative explosion that no other East Asian country experienced.
Why 40% of Vietnamese Share One Surname
The Dynastic History of Nguyen
Vietnam's surname Nguyen covers 40% of the population as a direct result of centuries of dynastic surname adoption — when new dynasties seized power, subjects adopted the royal surname for loyalty or survival, concentrating the name to an extraordinary degree.
Indian Surnames and the Caste System
A Complex History of Identity, Hierarchy, and Change
Indian surnames have historically encoded caste identity and hierarchy, prompting the Dalit naming movement led by B.R. Ambedkar to advocate for caste-neutral surnames, a tension that continues to shape how modern Indian families choose names.
How the Silk Road Influenced Asian Naming Traditions
Trade Routes, Cultural Exchange, and Name Borrowing
The Silk Road carried Buddhist, Persian, Arabic, and Sogdian naming traditions across Asia, introducing Sanskrit dharma names into East Asian Buddhist practice and Islamic names into Central and Southeast Asian cultures along millennia of trade-route cultural exchange.
History of Irish Names
From Ancient Gaelic to Modern Ireland
Irish names have been shaped by over two millennia of history — from Old Irish compound names through Viking and Norman influence, centuries of English suppression of Gaelic naming, and a powerful 20th-century revival that restored the O and Mac prefixes and traditional given names.
History of Scottish Names
From Celtic Roots to Modern Scotland
Scottish naming history moves from Pictish Celtic foundations through Norse settlement in the islands, the crystallization of the clan system with its Mac patronymics, and the post-Culloden diaspora that spread Scottish surnames across the English-speaking world.
History of Norwegian Names
From Vikings to Modern Norway
Norwegian naming history spans Old Norse compound names from the Viking Age through Christian medieval influences, Danish administrative dominance during the union period, and the decisive 1923 Name Act that ended the centuries-old patronymic tradition and froze hereditary surnames into permanent family names.
History of Swedish Names
From Vikings to the 1901 Name Law
Swedish naming history moves from Viking Age compound names through Christian medieval saints' names and the class-stratified estate system, culminating in the 1901 Name Law that froze patronymics into permanent surnames and drove the adoption of distinctive nature-word family names.
History of Danish Names
From Vikings to Modern Denmark
Danish naming history runs from the famous Viking kings Harald Bluetooth and Knud the Great through medieval Christian name adoption and Hanseatic German influence, culminating in the 1904 Surnames Act that froze patronymics into hereditary names and created the world's most concentrated surname distribution.
History of Finnish Names
From Tribal Names to the Fennicization Movement
Finnish naming history spans pre-Christian Finno-Ugric traditions preserved in the Kalevala, centuries of Swedish administrative dominance that imposed Swedish surnames on Finnish families, and the climactic 1906 Fennicization Day when 100,000 Finns converted their Swedish surnames to Finnish forms in a single act of cultural nationalism.