Naming Glossary

Key terms and concepts from Asian naming traditions

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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.

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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.

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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.

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Clan Genealogy

族谱 (zúpǔ)

A detailed genealogical record maintained by Chinese clans documenting lineage, generational names, and family history across centuries.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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).

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.