Naming Glossary
Key terms and concepts from Asian naming traditions
Seong
성 (姓)
The family name or surname in Korean naming convention, always placed before the given name and shared by all members of a patrilineal clan.
Ireum
이름
The given name in Korean, typically consisting of two syllables chosen to convey auspicious meaning, moral virtue, or desired qualities for the child.
Dollimja
돌림자 (行列字)
A shared generational character in Korean names, where one syllable of the given name is common among all siblings or cousins of the same generation within a clan.
Bon-gwan
본관 (本貫)
The ancestral seat or clan origin that identifies which specific clan a Korean surname belongs to, distinguishing families who share the same surname but descend from different progenitors.
Jokbo
족보 (族譜)
A comprehensive genealogical record maintained by Korean clans, documenting the lineage, marriages, and generational naming patterns of all clan members across centuries.
Hanja Naming
한자 작명 (漢字 作名)
The practice of selecting Chinese characters (hanja) for Korean given names, where each character's meaning, pronunciation, and stroke count are carefully considered.
Ohaeng
오행 (五行)
The Five Elements theory (wood, fire, earth, metal, water) applied to Korean naming, where name characters are chosen to balance elemental energies based on the child's birth data.
Saju Naming
사주 작명 (四柱 作名)
A naming method based on the Four Pillars of Destiny (saju), which analyzes the year, month, day, and hour of birth to determine auspicious name characters.
Jakinyeongsa
작명영사 (作名領事) / 작명사
A professional Korean name consultant who specializes in creating auspicious names based on saju analysis, ohaeng balance, hanja selection, and traditional naming principles.
Goyueo Name
고유어 이름
A pure Korean name composed of native Korean words rather than Sino-Korean characters, reflecting a modern trend toward distinctly Korean linguistic identity.
Court-Approved Hanja
인명용 한자 (人名用 漢字)
The official list of Chinese characters approved by the South Korean Supreme Court for use in personal names on legal documents and family registers.
Soshi-kaimei
창씨개명 (創氏改名)
The Japanese colonial policy (1939-1945) that pressured Koreans to adopt Japanese-style names, a deeply traumatic episode that strengthened Korean attachment to traditional naming practices.
Xìng
姓 (xìng)
The Chinese surname, placed before the given name, representing family lineage and patrilineal descent.
Míng
名 (míng)
The Chinese given name, chosen with great deliberation to convey aspirations, virtues, or auspicious meanings for the individual.
Hundred Family Surnames
百家姓 (Bǎijiāxìng)
A classic Chinese text from the Song Dynasty listing common surnames, traditionally used as a literacy primer and cultural reference for family lineage.
Clan Genealogy
族谱 (zúpǔ)
A detailed genealogical record maintained by Chinese clans documenting lineage, generational names, and family history across centuries.
Five Elements Naming
五行取名 (wǔxíng qǔmíng)
A traditional Chinese naming method that selects characters to balance the Five Elements (wood, fire, earth, metal, water) based on the child's birth chart.
Eight Characters / Four Pillars
八字 (bāzì)
A Chinese astrological system based on the year, month, day, and hour of birth, widely used to guide naming decisions and life predictions.
Generational Name Ranking
排行 (páiháng)
A naming convention where one character in each generation's names is predetermined by a clan poem, indicating generational order within a family.
Compound Surname
复姓 (fùxìng)
A Chinese surname consisting of two characters, such as Sīmǎ (司马) or Ōuyáng (欧阳), often with aristocratic or ethnic origins.
Character Selection for Names
汉字取名 (hànzì qǔmíng)
The deliberate art of choosing Chinese characters for a name based on meaning, stroke count, radical composition, and phonetic harmony.
Naming Taboo
名讳 (míng huì)
The traditional Chinese practice of avoiding the use of characters from the names of emperors, ancestors, and elders as a sign of respect.
Courtesy and Art Names
字号 (zì hào)
Traditional supplementary names given at adulthood (字, zì) or self-chosen as artistic pseudonyms (号, hào), reflecting maturity, ideals, or literary identity.
Household Registration Naming Rules
户口取名 (hùkǒu qǔmíng)
The legal regulations governing personal names in China's household registration (hukou) system, including permitted characters and name change procedures.
Myōji
名字 (みょうじ)
The Japanese surname or family name, written before the given name in Japanese order. Japan has over 100,000 distinct surnames, one of the highest counts of any nation.
Namae
名前 (なまえ)
The Japanese given name or first name, chosen by parents at birth. It appears after the surname in Japanese naming order and often carries aspirational or poetic meaning.
Jinmeiyō Kanji
人名用漢字 (じんめいようかんじ)
A supplementary list of kanji characters officially approved by the Japanese government for use in personal names, in addition to the jōyō kanji.
Jōyō Kanji
常用漢字 (じょうようかんじ)
The official list of 2,136 'regular-use' kanji designated by the Japanese government for use in publications, education, and legal documents including personal names.
Nanori
名乗り (なのり)
Special readings of kanji that are used exclusively in Japanese personal names, distinct from the standard on'yomi and kun'yomi pronunciations.
Kirakira Name
キラキラネーム
A colloquial term for unconventional Japanese names that use creative or unexpected kanji readings, often considered difficult to read or excessively unique.
Kakusū
画数 (かくすう)
The practice of evaluating the fortune or auspiciousness of a name based on the total stroke count of its kanji characters, widely used in Japanese name divination.
Koseki
戸籍 (こせき)
The Japanese family register system that officially records births, marriages, deaths, and names, serving as the primary legal document for identity and family relationships.
Furigana
振り仮名 (ふりがな)
Small phonetic characters (usually hiragana) placed above or beside kanji to indicate their pronunciation, essential for clarifying name readings in Japanese.
Uji-Kabane
氏姓 (うじかばね)
The ancient Japanese clan name and hereditary title system used from the Yamato period, which formed the historical foundation for Japanese surname practices.
Meiji Surname Adoption
明治の苗字 (めいじのみょうじ)
The historical process during the Meiji era (1868–1912) when all Japanese citizens were required by law to adopt a family name, creating the modern Japanese surname system.
On'yomi and Kun'yomi
音読み・訓読み (おんよみ・くんよみ)
The two main categories of kanji readings in Japanese: on'yomi (Chinese-derived) and kun'yomi (native Japanese), both of which play crucial roles in personal name construction.
Họ
Họ
The Vietnamese surname or family name, placed first in the full name order, representing patrilineal lineage and clan identity.
Tên
Tên
The Vietnamese given name, placed last in the full name order, which serves as the primary identifier and carries the family's hopes and aspirations for the child.
Tên đệm
Tên đệm / Tên lót
The Vietnamese middle name, positioned between the surname and given name, which can indicate gender, generational lineage, or add poetic meaning to the full name.
Hán-Việt
Hán-Việt
Sino-Vietnamese readings of Chinese characters used in Vietnamese names, providing classical meanings and a formal register that remains deeply influential in naming practices.
Quốc ngữ
Quốc ngữ
The modern Latin-based Vietnamese writing system with diacritical marks, adopted as the national script and used to write all Vietnamese names today.
Chữ Nôm
Chữ Nôm
A historical Vietnamese writing system that adapted and created Chinese-style characters to represent native Vietnamese words, once used for recording names and literature.
Nguyễn Surname Dominance
Họ Nguyễn
The remarkable demographic phenomenon in which approximately 40% of all Vietnamese people share the surname Nguyễn, making it by far the most common surname in the country.
Dynastic Surname Changes
Đổi họ theo triều đại
The historical Vietnamese practice of populations adopting the surname of the ruling dynasty, which dramatically shaped the distribution of Vietnamese surnames.
Diacritics in Vietnamese Names
Dấu thanh trong tên
The system of tone marks and vowel diacritics in Vietnamese that are essential components of names, distinguishing entirely different words and meanings.
Văn and Thị
Văn / Thị
Traditional Vietnamese gender-indicating middle names where Văn (文) designates males and Thị (氏) designates females, a convention that remains common but is declining.
Name Taboo
Kỵ húy / Tên húy
The Vietnamese cultural practice of avoiding the use of names belonging to ancestors, elders, or revered figures, rooted in Confucian respect hierarchies.
Overseas Vietnamese Naming
Đặt tên Việt Kiều
The naming practices of the Vietnamese diaspora (Việt Kiều), who navigate between preserving Vietnamese naming traditions and adapting to host country conventions.
Nāmakaraṇa
नामकरण
The Hindu naming ceremony, one of the sixteen saṃskāras (life-cycle rites), traditionally performed on the twelfth day after a child's birth.
Nakṣatra
नक्षत्र
One of the 27 lunar mansions in Vedic astrology, each governing specific syllables considered auspicious for naming a child born under that star.
Rāśi
राशि
The Vedic zodiac sign system comprising twelve signs, each associated with specific initial syllables used to guide the naming of a newborn child.
Gotra
गोत्र
A patrilineal clan designation tracing descent from one of the ancient Vedic sages (ṛṣis), used primarily among Hindu Brahmin communities to regulate marriage and lineage.
Jāti Surname
जाति
Hereditary family names derived from caste or sub-caste affiliations, serving as markers of community identity, occupation, and social standing in Indian society.
Singh and Kaur
सिंह / कौर
Singh ('lion') and Kaur ('princess') are the universal surnames adopted by Sikh men and women respectively, instituted by Guru Gobind Singh in 1699 to abolish caste distinctions.
South Indian Patronymic System
தென்னிந்திய பெயர் முறை
A naming convention prevalent in Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, and Kerala where the father's given name serves as the child's surname or initial.
Kuṇḍalī
कुंडली
The Vedic birth chart or horoscope, a detailed astrological diagram mapping celestial body positions at the exact time and place of birth, used to determine auspicious names.
Saṃskāra
संस्कार
The system of sixteen sacred life-cycle rites in Hinduism, several of which — including prenatal rites and the naming ceremony — directly influence how a child is named.
Sanskrit-Origin Names
संस्कृत नामकरण
Personal names derived from the classical Sanskrit language, chosen for their etymological meanings, phonetic beauty, and spiritual associations.
South Indian Initial System
முதலெழுத்து முறை
A naming convention, especially common in Tamil Nadu, where a person's name is preceded by one or more initials representing their father's name, village, or ancestral house.
Anti-Caste Naming Movements
जाति-विरोधी नामकरण आंदोलन
Social and political efforts in India to reject caste-identifying surnames in favor of caste-neutral names, pioneered by leaders like B.R. Ambedkar and Jyotirao Phule.
Forename
Forename
The British term for a person's given name or first name, placed before the surname in English naming convention and recorded on all official documents.
British Surname
Surname
The hereditary family name used in British naming convention, placed after all forenames and inherited patrilineally, though modern law permits various inheritance arrangements.
British Patronymic Surnames
Patronymic Surnames
Hereditary surnames derived from a father's given name, typically using suffixes such as -son (Johnson, Robertson) or prefixes such as Fitz- (Fitzgerald), now frozen as fixed family names.
Middle Name
Middle Name
A name given between the forename and surname in British naming convention, used to honour relatives, carry religious significance, or provide an additional identity option.
Double-Barrelled Surname
Double-Barrelled Surname
A hyphenated surname combining two family names, traditionally used by British aristocratic families to preserve both lineages when a family without male heirs merged with another.
Welsh Patronymic System
System Patronymig Cymraeg
The traditional Welsh naming system using 'ap' (son of) and 'ferch' (daughter of) before the father's name, which gradually compressed into fixed hereditary surnames such as Price, Bowen, and Pugh.
Scottish Clan Naming
Ainm Cloinne / Clan Name
The system of Scottish Gaelic clan surnames using the 'Mac' prefix (son of) and the clan chief's ancestral name, creating naming traditions such as MacDonald, MacGregor, and MacKenzie.
Deed Poll
Deed Poll
The primary legal instrument used in England and Wales to formally change one's name, historically a single-party legal deed that becomes the evidence of a new identity once enrolled.
Peerage Naming
Peerage Title
The British system of hereditary and life titles — Duke, Marquess, Earl, Viscount, Baron — that create a parallel naming identity distinct from a peer's birth surname.
Regnal Name
Regnal Name
The name a British monarch chooses to reign under, which may differ from their birth forename and is formally adopted at accession to the throne.
Occupational Surname
Occupational Surname
British surnames derived from a medieval ancestor's trade or craft, including Smith, Baker, Taylor, Fletcher, Mason, and Thatcher, which became hereditary from approximately the 13th century.
Christening Name
Christening Name
The name formally given to a child at Christian baptism in British tradition, historically the sole legal means of name registration and identical to the given name in most cases.
Prénom
prénom
The French given name or first name, literally 'the name before' (the surname), formally recorded in the état civil and historically governed by strict naming laws.
Nom de Famille
nom de famille
The French family name or surname, transmitted hereditarily and recorded in the état civil, placed after all prénoms in the complete legal name.
État Civil
état civil
The French civil registration system, established in 1792 during the Revolution, which secularised the recording of births (and therefore names), marriages, and deaths away from the Church.
Prénom Composé
prénom composé
A hyphenated compound given name in French naming tradition, such as Jean-Pierre, Marie-Claire, or Anne-Sophie, treated as a single indivisible prénom in legal contexts.
Nobiliary Particle
particule nobiliaire
The preposition 'de,' 'du,' 'des,' or 'd'' inserted before a French family name, historically indicating noble lineage and still present in many French aristocratic surnames today.
Nom d'Usage
nom d'usage
The name a French person uses in daily life when it differs from their legal birth name, most commonly a married person who uses their spouse's surname without formally changing their nom de famille.
Saints' Calendar Naming
Calendrier des saints
The French tradition of giving children names from the Catholic calendar of saints, historically mandated by law and still reflected in France's tradition of celebrating name days (fêtes).
Livret de Famille
livret de famille
The French family record booklet issued by the état civil at marriage or at the birth of a first child, containing all family members' official names and civil status records.
Loi du 11 Germinal An XI
Loi du 11 germinal an XI (1803)
The Napoleonic naming law of 1803 that restricted French parents to choosing prénoms from the saints' calendar and from ancient history, remaining in force for 190 years until 1993.
Loi du 8 Janvier 1993
Loi du 8 janvier 1993
The French law of 8 January 1993 that liberalised the naming of children by abolishing the approved-list restriction of the 1803 Napoleonic law, replacing it with a child's-best-interests standard.
Nom de Jeune Fille
nom de jeune fille
The French term for a woman's maiden name — her nom de famille at birth — which remains her legal surname throughout her life regardless of marriage under French law.
Breton Celtic Naming
Anvioù Brezhoneg
The naming traditions of Brittany's Celtic Breton-speaking population, featuring names from Breton mythology, Christian saints, and the Arthurian tradition, long suppressed by French naming law.
Ainm Gaeilge
Ainm Gaeilge
An Irish-language given name in its native Gaelic form, often distinct from anglicized equivalents that were imposed during British colonial administration.
Mac Prefix
Mac / Mc
A Gaelic patronymic prefix meaning 'son of', used in Irish and Scottish surnames to indicate descent from a named male ancestor.
O' Prefix
Ó / Ua
An Irish patronymic prefix derived from the Old Irish 'ua' meaning 'grandson' or 'descendant of', now the most common Gaelic surname prefix in Ireland.
Sept (Irish)
Sloinne / Fine
A sept was a kinship division within an Irish clan, comprising families who shared a surname and common ancestor but occupied a specific territory under a local chieftain.
Ainm Baiste
Ainm Baiste
The baptismal or christening name given to an Irish Catholic child at the sacrament of baptism, historically the primary form of personal identification in parish records.
Gaeltacht Naming
Ainmniú sa Ghaeltacht
Naming practices specific to Irish-speaking Gaeltacht regions, where Irish-language names are used exclusively or preferentially as part of active language preservation.
Irish Patronymic System
Mac / Nic / Bean
The Irish system of gendered patronymic prefixes: Mac (son of), Nic (daughter of the son of), and Bean Uí/Mhic (wife of a descendant of), encoding gender and descent in the surname.
Irish Matronymic Forms
Ní / Bean Uí
The Irish-language surname forms Ní and Bean Uí used by unmarried and married women respectively, indicating female descent or marriage within the Ó patronymic lineage.
Ogham
Ogham / Ogam
The earliest Irish writing system, used primarily from the fourth to seventh centuries CE to inscribe personal names and memorials on standing stones, consisting of linear strokes cut along a central stemline.
Irish Name Order
Ord Ainm na Gaeilge
In Irish, the personal name precedes the surname (given name first), matching the English convention but diverging in gendered and grammatical treatment of the surname element.
Ainm Oifigiúil
An tAinm Oifigiúil
The official name (ainm oifigiúil) as recognized under Irish law, which since 2004 explicitly acknowledges Irish-language name forms as having equal legal standing with English-language forms.
Gaelicisation
Gaelú
The movement and process of restoring or adopting Irish-language forms of personal names that had been anglicized under British colonial administration, particularly active since the late nineteenth century.
Scottish Clan System
Clann
The Scottish clan system is a kinship structure based on real or assumed common descent from a named ancestor, historically associated with defined territories and a hereditary chief.
Mac Prefix (Scottish)
Mac / Mc
The Scottish Gaelic patronymic prefix Mac (son of) forms the basis of hundreds of Scottish clan surnames and serves as one of the most visible markers of Scottish Gaelic heritage.
Scottish Gaelic Name
Ainm Gàidhlig
A Scottish Gaelic personal name in its native form, which often differs substantially from the anglicized or Scots equivalent used in official records and everyday English-language contexts.
Tartan Identity
Breacan
Clan tartans are distinctive woven textile patterns (sets) that serve as visual identifiers of Scottish clan affiliation, formalized during the nineteenth century Romantic revival of Highland culture.
Sept (Scottish)
Sliochd / Slios
A Scottish sept is a smaller family group formally affiliated with a larger clan, often bearing a different surname but owing loyalty to the clan chief and sharing clan identity, tartan, and gatherings.
Scottish Patronymic Tradition
Sloinneadh
The Scottish Gaelic practice of identifying individuals through patronymic chains (sloinneadh), which preceded and coexisted with the adoption of fixed hereditary surnames from the sixteenth century onward.
National Records of Scotland
Clàran Nàiseanta na h-Alba
The National Records of Scotland (NRS) is the government agency responsible for civil registration of births, deaths, and marriages in Scotland, including the registration and legal recognition of names.
Scottish Regnal Naming
Ainm Rìoghail
The tradition by which Scottish monarchs chose or were designated a regal name — sometimes distinct from their baptismal name — to express dynastic continuity, legitimacy, or political alliances.
Kirk Naming Traditions
Ainmeachadh na Eaglaise
Naming customs associated with the Church of Scotland (Kirk), including the baptismal register tradition, godparent naming conventions, and the influence of Reformed Protestant theology on name choice.
Lowland Scottish Surnames
Sloinnidhean nan Galldachd
Surnames of the Scottish Lowlands, formed principally from occupational, locational, and descriptive origins under the influence of Scots, Norman-French, and Old English naming traditions from the twelfth century onward.
Highland Gaelic Naming
Ainmeachadh na Gàidhealtachd
Naming conventions of the Scottish Highlands, characterized by Gaelic given names, patronymic bynames (sloinneadh), territorial associations, and the use of descriptive nicknames (fionn, dubh, ruadh) to distinguish individuals.
Scottish Legal Naming
Ainm fo Lagh na h-Alba
Scottish law governs name changes and registration differently from English law: Scotland does not recognize the English deed poll procedure, and name changes are effected through a statutory declaration or by simple usage under Scots common law.
Norwegian Patronymic System
Patronym / -sen og -datter
The traditional Norwegian naming system where children took a surname formed from the father's first name plus the suffix -sen (son) or -datter (daughter). Norway officially transitioned to fixed hereditary surnames in 1923.
Norwegian Farm Name
Gårdsnavn
A distinctly Norwegian naming tradition in which individuals used the name of the farm (gård) where they lived as their surname. As people moved between farms, their surnames could change accordingly.
Norwegian Name Act
Navneloven
The Norwegian Name Act (navneloven), enacted in 2003, is the legal framework that governs the choice, registration, and change of personal names in Norway. It replaced earlier, more restrictive name legislation.
Norwegian Middle Name
Mellomnavn
A mellomnavn is a legally recognised middle name in Norway that occupies a special position between the given name and surname. Unlike a simple additional given name, it often functions as a family heritage marker.
Norwegian Name Day
Navnedag
A navnedag is a calendar tradition in Norway in which specific given names are assigned to particular days of the year, and bearers of that name may celebrate their name day similarly to a birthday.
Norse Mythology Naming
Norrøne mytologiske navn
Norwegian naming inspired by Norse mythology draws on the names of gods, giants, and legendary figures from the Old Norse religious tradition, with names like Thor, Freya, Odin, and Sigrid remaining in use today.
City-Based Norwegian Surname
Bynavn
Bynavn refers to Norwegian surnames derived from the names of towns, cities, or urban localities. These location-based surnames emerged particularly as rural Norwegians migrated to urban centres and adopted the city name as an identifier.
Norwegian Family Surname
Slektsnavn / Etternavn
A slektsnavn (family surname or etternavn) is the hereditary surname that all members of a Norwegian family share and pass to their children. It became legally mandatory under the 1923 Name Act.
Norwegian Personal Name Structure
Norsk personnavn
Norwegian personal naming follows a three-part structure: one or more given names (fornavn), an optional middle name (mellomnavn), and a hereditary surname (etternavn). This structure is regulated by the 2003 Name Act.
Norwegianisation of Sami Names
Fornorsking av samiske navn
Norwegianisation (fornorsking) refers to the systematic colonial-era policies that pressured and sometimes forced indigenous Sami and Kven people to adopt Norwegian names, suppressing indigenous naming traditions from the mid-19th century through much of the 20th century.
Norwegian National Population Register
Folkeregisteret
The Folkeregisteret is Norway's official National Population Register, maintained by the Norwegian Tax Administration (Skatteetaten), which records the legal names, addresses, and civil status of all residents in Norway.
Viking Age Naming Traditions
Vikingtidenes navneskikk
Viking Age Norse people used a combination of given names, patronymics, and descriptive bynames (kenningarnafn or viðrnefni) to identify individuals, reflecting values of kinship, the divine, and personal reputation.
Swedish Patronymic System
Patronymikon / -sson och -dotter
The traditional Swedish patronymic naming system gave children a surname formed from the father's given name plus the suffix -sson (son) or -dotter (daughter). This system was the dominant mode of hereditary identification in Sweden until the 19th century.
Swedish Soldier Name
Soldatnamn
Soldatnamn (soldier names) were unique surnames assigned to Swedish military conscripts from the 17th century onward, allowing the army to distinguish soldiers who shared common patronymic surnames. These names are now among the most distinctive Swedish surnames.
Swedish Names Act
Namnlagen
The Swedish Names Act (namnlagen) is the primary legislation governing the registration, use, and change of personal names in Sweden, currently regulated under the Names Act 2016 (lag 2016:1013 om personnamn).
Swedish Name Day
Namnsdag
The Swedish namnsdag is a calendar tradition in which specific first names are assigned to each day of the year, and bearers of those names may celebrate their name day. The Swedish name-day calendar is formally maintained by the Swedish Academy.
Swedish Nature-Based Surname
Naturnamn / Naturinspirerat efternamn
Nature-based Swedish surnames (naturnamn) are compound surnames formed from elements drawn from the natural landscape — such as -berg (mountain), -ström (stream), -lund (grove), and -dal (valley) — and are among the most characteristic features of Swedish surname culture.
Swedish Noble Family Name
Adelsnamn / Adligt efternamn
Swedish aristocratic surnames (adelsnamn) are distinguished by the use of particles such as af, von, and de before the family name, indicating ennobled lineage and formally recorded in the Swedish House of Nobility (Riddarhuset).
Swedish Baptismal Name
Dopnamn
A dopnamn is the given name received at baptism in the Swedish Lutheran tradition. Historically, it was the primary legal identifier of a person, and baptismal records kept by the Church of Sweden were the main source of civil registration until 1991.
Swedish Byname
Tillnamn / Binnamn
A tillnamn (byname or additional name) is a descriptive, occupational, or locational name added to a person's given name to distinguish individuals who share the same given name within a community. Tillnamn were precursors to fixed surnames in Swedish naming history.
Swedish Name Registration via Skatteverket
Namnregistrering hos Skatteverket
The Swedish Tax Authority (Skatteverket) is responsible for registering personal names in Sweden under the 2016 Names Act. It reviews proposed given names and processes surname changes through the national population register (folkbokföringen).
Swedish Double First Name
Dubbelt förnamn / Sammansatt förnamn
The Swedish tradition of double first names involves giving a child two given names hyphenated or written together as a single compound name, such as Anna-Karin, Lars-Erik, or Karl-Johan, creating a fused identity name treated as a unit.
Swedish Family Name
Familjenamn / Efternamn
A familjenamn (family name or efternamn) is the hereditary surname shared by members of a Swedish family and transmitted to children. Sweden's adoption of mandatory hereditary surnames was completed in the early 20th century.
Swedish Peasant Naming Traditions
Allmogenamn / Allmogens namnbruk
Allmogenamn refers to the naming customs of Swedish common people (allmoge) — the rural farming population — before the adoption of fixed hereditary surnames, characterised by patronymics, farm names, and descriptive bynames.
Patronymikon
Patronymikon
The Danish patronymic naming system, historically forming surnames by appending the suffix -sen (son) or -datter (daughter) to the father's given name, producing names like Jensen, Nielsen, and Hansen.
Navneloven
navneloven
The Danish Name Act (navneloven), enacted in 2006, which governs the registration of personal names in Denmark, establishing rules for given names, surnames, and legal name changes.
Mellemnavn
mellemnavn
The Danish middle name (mellemnavn), a legally recognised additional name placed between the given name and the surname, which may function as a secondary given name or carry family or patronymic heritage.
Navnedag
navnedag
The Danish name day (navnedag), a calendar tradition in which each day of the year is assigned one or more personal names, and individuals celebrate their navnedag as a personal occasion akin to a secondary birthday.
Adelsnavne
adelsnavne
Danish noble family names (adelsnavne), the hereditary surnames of the Danish aristocracy, often distinguished by German-influenced suffixes, Latinised forms, or nobiliary particles, reflecting centuries of aristocratic naming conventions.
Danish Patronymic Law of 1828
Anordning af 1828
The Danish royal ordinance of 1828 that mandated the adoption of fixed hereditary surnames, ending the centuries-old patronymic system where surnames changed with each generation.
Kirkebog
kirkebog
Danish church book records (kirkebøger), the parish registers maintained by the Church of Denmark that recorded baptisms, confirmations, marriages, and burials and serve as the primary source for Danish genealogical name research.
CPR Civil Registration
Det Centrale Personregister
Denmark's Central Person Register (Det Centrale Personregister, CPR), established in 1968, which assigns every resident a unique 10-digit personal identification number and serves as the authoritative registry for legal names and civil status.
Danish Royal Naming Traditions
Kongelige navnetraditioner
The naming conventions of the Danish royal house, characterised by a rotating set of dynastic names drawn from Norse, German, and Christian traditions, reflecting Denmark's historical alliances and the continuity of the monarchy.
Tilnavn
tilnavn
A Danish byname or descriptive nickname (tilnavn) historically given to distinguish individuals who shared the same given name, referring to a physical characteristic, place of origin, occupation, or personal trait.
Slægtsnavn
slægtsnavn
The Danish hereditary family name (slægtsnavn), the fixed surname passed from generation to generation within a family line, introduced as a legal requirement in the 19th century to replace the traditional patronymic system.
Døbenavn
døbenavn
The Danish baptismal name (døbenavn), the given name formally bestowed upon a child during the Lutheran church christening ceremony, which historically was the primary means of name registration in Denmark.
Sukunimi
sukunimi
The Finnish hereditary family name or surname (sukunimi), typically derived from nature, geography, occupation, or phonetically adapted from Swedish-language family names, which became mandatory for all Finnish citizens in the late 19th century.
Etunimi
etunimi
The Finnish given name or first name (etunimi), placed before the surname in Finnish naming order, with Finnish law permitting up to four given names per person.
Nimipäivä
nimipäivä
The Finnish name day (nimipäivä), a calendar tradition in which nearly every day of the year is assigned one or more Finnish names, celebrated as a personal occasion by Finns bearing those names.
Nimilaki
nimilaki
The Finnish Names Act (nimilaki), most recently comprehensively reformed in 2019, which regulates the registration of given names and surnames in Finland, balancing individual freedom with the child's best interests.
Patronyymi
patronyymi
The Finnish patronymic naming system, historically forming a child's surname from the father's given name by appending -poika (son) or -tytär (daughter), a practice that predated the adoption of fixed hereditary surnames.
Finnish Nature-Based Names
luontonimistö
The Finnish tradition of deriving given names and surnames from natural elements — forests, waters, landscapes, plants, and animals — reflecting the deep cultural connection between Finnish identity and the natural environment.
Matronyymi
matronyymi
The Finnish matronymic naming practice, in which a child's surname or byname is derived from the mother's given name rather than the father's, a rarer but historically documented alternative to the predominant patronymic system.
Suomalaistaminen
suomalaistaminen
The Finnish-language movement to replace Swedish-language personal names with Finnish equivalents, particularly surnames, which was especially intense during the late 19th and early 20th centuries as part of Finnish national awakening.
Väestörekisteri
Digi- ja väestötietovirasto
Finland's Digital and Population Data Services Agency (Digi- ja väestötietovirasto, DVV), the official authority responsible for maintaining the population register and processing all personal name registrations and changes in Finland.
Suku
suku
The Finnish concept of kin or extended family (suku), which encompasses the broader network of relatives beyond the nuclear family and has historically influenced naming practices by shaping which names are honoured and transmitted across generations.
Kalevala Naming
Kalevala-nimet
The Finnish tradition of drawing personal names from characters and concepts in the Kalevala, Finland's national epic compiled by Elias Lönnrot in 1835–1849, including names such as Väinö, Aino, Ilmari, and Tapio.
Lisänimi
lisänimi
A Finnish additional byname or descriptive nickname (lisänimi) historically used to distinguish individuals sharing the same given name within a community, often referring to a physical feature, place of origin, occupation, or personal quality.