On Worldbuilding: Place Names - countries, cities, places

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  • Опубликовано: 7 май 2024
  • Store your etymology over on worldanvil.com annnd then flick me your work over at @TimHickson1 on Twitter! Naming places in your fictional world is hard, be in countries, towns, or that stupid farm your D&D players really want to buy FOR NO REASON.
    Watch out 6/12/19
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Комментарии • 3,5 тыс.

  • @HelloFutureMe
    @HelloFutureMe  4 года назад +3797

    *CORRECTION* : Istanbul was not officially renamed till many centuries later (though the name Istanbul was used within the Ottoman Empire colloquially), and the maps I found were not necessarily Ottoman made - my bad research there. The point about names and power still stands, but I made a mistake. If you want a different example, look into St Petersburg in Russia, whose name changes reflected power shifts as well.
    No flag, no country name, and I'm backing it up with this rifle from... the National Naming Association. ***Watch out 6/12/19***
    ~ Tim

    • @Eclipse-mf6hc
      @Eclipse-mf6hc 4 года назад +41

      I’ve got so many countries which I should actually name, rather than “the kingdom of ____” errrrrrrr........ well it’s an excuse to watch your video, I guess 🤷‍♀️

    • @samvandervelden8243
      @samvandervelden8243 4 года назад +14

      Hey Tim, I really love your videos and wonder whether you could also make a video about Joseph Campbell 's monomyth/the hero's journey?

    • @theshamanite
      @theshamanite 4 года назад +28

      There's way too many Springfield's in the US. Where's that elaboration nooch?
      There's usually just one Springfield per state that has one, so it's kind of hard to blame.

    • @sebastiansilverfox6912
      @sebastiansilverfox6912 4 года назад +24

      @@theshamanite There are a lot of city names in the USA that occur almost one per state. What this says about the USA is the historic emphasis on state governments and thier once greater autonomy. It demonstrates the focus of the power and that the federal government was a unifying force to it's subordinate regions but not an oppressive one. This does not mean it was perfect in this regard but that there was an overarching theme and value placed on it. In contrast, too many Alexandrias in the ancient world was because one guy named a bunch of places he conquered after himself. Both tell you a lot about the culture.

    • @mcpics4448
      @mcpics4448 4 года назад +3

      Hello Future Me 👌

  • @eknapp49
    @eknapp49 4 года назад +6313

    “How inappropriate to call this planet "Earth," when it is clearly "Ocean.” -Arthur C. Clarke

    • @Mr.Nichan
      @Mr.Nichan 4 года назад +534

      but there's Earth under the ocean. Maybe the planet should be called "Magma".

    • @samuelalphabet5360
      @samuelalphabet5360 4 года назад +443

      Goes to the rule of power. The people writing the history books live on the land parts. If someday the dolphins or octopi take over the world they'll probably call it ocean or something.

    • @TheDeathmail
      @TheDeathmail 4 года назад +207

      Water covers the earth... but if you take away the earth, there is no planet... on the other hand, take away the Ocean and you still have the planet... barren... but still the planet.. it's like how a bucket filled with water has more water than bucket, but the item is still called a bucket... it's just holding the water...

    • @Vespuchian
      @Vespuchian 4 года назад +28

      Only the majority of us don't live on the ocean, we named the place after the bits we live on.

    • @Schlingelis
      @Schlingelis 4 года назад +41

      @@Mr.Nichan I vote for Magma. That sounds pretty badass!

  • @martinxy1291
    @martinxy1291 4 года назад +4020

    We can only agree on one thing, and thats the name of our planet, *DIRT*

    • @jacovichstabs841
      @jacovichstabs841 4 года назад +148

      Actually, I prefer Sediment.

    • @mrhed0nist
      @mrhed0nist 4 года назад +83

      I suspect its only called Dirt in a few languages.

    • @martinxy1291
      @martinxy1291 4 года назад +37

      @@mrhed0nist yeah that probably, I just dont know which ones. Hell I think theres also a few that might still not have a name for the planet

    • @markusg3874
      @markusg3874 4 года назад +60

      EXCEPT ITS CALLED TELLUS! No, wait, that's just dirt in Latin...

    • @Halosty45
      @Halosty45 4 года назад +98

      Having done some looking around... most languages just use dirt or ground or earth ball so it's all basically the same. Sometimes they're named after gods of earth and stuff, which is the same thing.

  • @imprincesswolfy2565
    @imprincesswolfy2565 2 года назад +2992

    Fun fact: in Mexico there’s a state called Yucatán, which was named when a Spanish conquistador arrived there and asked someone “what do you call this place?” He answered “yucatan” which meant either “I’m not from here” or “I don’t understand you”

    • @melaniea8239
      @melaniea8239 Год назад +251

      This information literally made my day. :D

    • @carso1500
      @carso1500 Год назад +108

      I'm mexican and i didnt know this

    • @lingu7733
      @lingu7733 Год назад +71

      @@carso1500 Same and I lived in Cancun for 20 years lmao

    • @unsuspiciousdweller8967
      @unsuspiciousdweller8967 Год назад +170

      Allegedly, that's the same reason for the name of Kangaroos in Australia lol (supposedly "Kanaguruu" meant "i dont understand you" in the language of the locals they met)

    • @DokterKaj
      @DokterKaj Год назад +86

      @@unsuspiciousdweller8967 That's a completely untrue myth lol

  • @Tomensnaben
    @Tomensnaben 2 года назад +3516

    "You don't need to create an entire language to name a place." Thanks, I really needed that.

    • @abdoalrahmansabeha977
      @abdoalrahmansabeha977 Год назад +3

      @@slevinchannel7589 link?

    • @slevinchannel7589
      @slevinchannel7589 Год назад +11

      @@abdoalrahmansabeha977 I gave you all the names!
      You find i in 5 Sec's.

    • @RavenCloak13
      @RavenCloak13 Год назад +30

      You don't. Especially when other languages already exist and can just take or add in letters.

    • @slevinchannel7589
      @slevinchannel7589 Год назад +2

      @@RavenCloak13 ??

    • @RavenCloak13
      @RavenCloak13 Год назад +31

      @@slevinchannel7589
      You can just look up another language and take or add letters to that language to make it "new" or "alien" without making a whole new language is what I meant.

  • @James_Wisniewski
    @James_Wisniewski 4 года назад +5612

    Then there's the African nation of Chad, a country called Lake which was named after a lake called Lake Lake.

    • @xiphactinusaudax1045
      @xiphactinusaudax1045 3 года назад +494

      and Chad is one of the least lake-like nations I can think of

    • @Justsevensi
      @Justsevensi 3 года назад +78

      Chad is most likely chaud - french for hot

    • @xiphactinusaudax1045
      @xiphactinusaudax1045 3 года назад +552

      @@Justsevensi Chad is named after Lake Chad which means Lake in an African dialect. That's the actual origin

    • @oscarwind4266
      @oscarwind4266 3 года назад +159

      Lake lake in the country of lake.

    • @b1bbscraz3y
      @b1bbscraz3y 3 года назад +125

      all these "lakes" and "Chad's". is it weird that I have a customer at the place I work named Chad Lake?

  • @Scroteydada
    @Scroteydada 4 года назад +1880

    My tactic: make names that sound cool and then asspull a deep history around it I'll hardly refer to in the final text

    • @carolyn8740
      @carolyn8740 3 года назад +36

      Same.

    • @phrax6767
      @phrax6767 3 года назад +94

      Yeah this is exactly what I did. I named my world Forwent then later came up with a legendary king named Forwent that the world was named in honor of.

    • @Metalhammer1993
      @Metalhammer1993 3 года назад +145

      I just try to be brutally on the nose with a couple of names I can joke around. Like a southern trade route being guarded by two towers called "The Hands" why? I have no idea but the locals in my world have a good explanation "because there's always an asshole keeping his hands open." As the towers function both as garrison and toll booths. The eastern tower regulates incoming wares and taxes the western outgoing.

    • @Metalhammer1993
      @Metalhammer1993 3 года назад +34

      @@keenakeet3792 thanks- I name most stuff on the nose like that.or at least in a very simplistic fashion. A "green mountain" for a volcano would probably be a bit counter intuitive but if it is what makes an agricultural region flourish? why not? I use names like that for natural landmarks and cities/villages that evolved naturally and a bit stranger less fitting names for defensive structures. (defensive structures are named after the elements. like Seahold or stormwind. Just because it is former empire with an almost druidic state religion. Meaning symbols of strength are always taken from nature, (plus everything that has to do with storms just sounds cool but you gotta justify that within the storx^^) )

    • @kirillzakharov7336
      @kirillzakharov7336 3 года назад +6

      i just play around with random letters that I think fit together well, and the same fore character names.

  • @DolusVulpes
    @DolusVulpes 2 года назад +1308

    My favorite thing about how the names of places evolve is that they will without fail always become as redundant as possible. There are so many hills whose names mean "hill hill", so many rivers whose names mean "river river", and so many islands whose names mean "island island". The practice of naming things redundantly is so common that there's even a Wikipedia page just for listing places with redundant names.

    • @cockmaster314
      @cockmaster314 Год назад +11

      Link to the Wikipedia page?

    • @DolusVulpes
      @DolusVulpes Год назад +53

      @@cockmaster314 en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tautological_place_names

    • @cockmaster314
      @cockmaster314 Год назад +18

      @@DolusVulpes Thanks, this’ll be a fun read

    • @fatrobin72
      @fatrobin72 Год назад +29

      There are also places where due to significant language changes it gets repeated (e.g. Bredon Hill (and Breedon Hill) "Brez" is Celtic, "Dun" is old English)

    • @DolusVulpes
      @DolusVulpes Год назад +40

      @@fatrobin72 hill hill hill is my favorite hill.

  • @MerryMac1000
    @MerryMac1000 2 года назад +254

    The west country of England also has "Wookey Hole Caves" which translates to "Cave Cave Caves"

    • @lsmith3557
      @lsmith3557 Год назад +16

      I've been and can confirm, there are, in fact, caves there

    • @impracticaltesseract
      @impracticaltesseract 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@lsmith3557 same, they have some very cavy caves ngl

    • @KTD389
      @KTD389 7 месяцев назад +1

      The caves are so cavy

    • @TehyaMai
      @TehyaMai 7 месяцев назад

      Yes, and I love them.

  • @matiaspereyra9392
    @matiaspereyra9392 4 года назад +2931

    "Coming up with names is hard"
    Yes, ask the scientific community

    • @theblancmange1265
      @theblancmange1265 4 года назад +179

      The sonic gene is one of my favourites.

    • @hexleviosa2465
      @hexleviosa2465 4 года назад +269

      I think the physicists lost it when naming quark “flavours”

    • @BonaparteBardithion
      @BonaparteBardithion 4 года назад +162

      I like how the plants and animal names sometimes contrast with the common names.
      Take the Douglas Fir, named for a botanist. The scientific name, pseudotsuga menziesii, is named for a rival botanist: Menzies.
      One rival won the recognition of the scientific community, and the other entered the average man's lexicon.
      "Pseudotsuga" is interesting in itself in that it combines Greek "false" and Japanese "hemlock".
      False Hemlock, which is apt since the Douglas Fir is neither a hemlock nor a true fir tree.

    • @LCliffhanger
      @LCliffhanger 4 года назад +59

      just learn latin and science gets a lot easier

    • @AtarahDerek
      @AtarahDerek 4 года назад +120

      Certain scientific names reveal a lot about the average maturity level of biologists.

  • @ThrottleKitty
    @ThrottleKitty 4 года назад +2284

    Almost every desert on the planet is named "Desert Desert", just with a different language used for the first desert.

    • @lokeshchandak3660
      @lokeshchandak3660 4 года назад +194

      Then we need to reclassify what we consider a name.
      For example, if aliens were to call me Lokesh Human, does Human become part of my name of is it just a classifier added to a name?
      If we seriously consider classifiers to not be part of the name, then there's less instances of river rivers, because we know that the name is Avon, and it's a river. Part of the problem comes from our tendency to include classifiers as part of the name. Why am I talking to a cat again?

    • @ThrottleKitty
      @ThrottleKitty 4 года назад +45

      @@lokeshchandak3660 .... ???? I'm going based on current classifications of names, without making up random things for no reason.

    • @lokeshchandak3660
      @lokeshchandak3660 4 года назад +59

      @@ThrottleKitty Chaos my friend. Make of it what you will.

    • @teabearchurchill5600
      @teabearchurchill5600 4 года назад +94

      @Insignatious The difference being, Most rivers actually have different names than "River river".
      I was doing some research for this for an RPG based on going back to the root meanings. So, for example, the Nile means "Great", Mississippi means "Long water", Amazon means "One breast" (named supposedly by the Portuguese commemorating a battle with a group of female native warriors near the mouth of said river), Missouri means "Muddy", Thames means "Wide", etc etc.
      There are, of course, differences even among deserts. While the general meaning of the names usually will boil down to "Desert desert" (Sahara, as you noted, literally is "Desert"), there are variations. "Gobi", for example, means literally "No Water", while Kalahari means "Thirsty place", Sinai means "Hated or Cursed place", while the Mojave desert was named after the Mojave people who lived there... "Beside the Water".
      The Namibian desert, of course, just means "Big". So there are actual exceptions to the rule

    • @givemeanaxe
      @givemeanaxe 4 года назад +33

      @Insignatious hrrrmmmm someone here is definitely speaks English as a first language... possibly the only.

  • @polytech8151
    @polytech8151 Год назад +120

    A personal favorite of mine about a name of a fictional town is "Novac" in Fallout New Vegas, called like that for the only working letters of the sign of "no vacancy" in the central motel.

    • @alexwildner6369
      @alexwildner6369 9 месяцев назад +15

      Thats immensely clever and completely believable and its really cool how that name will now outlive the sign

    • @repubblesmcglonky8990
      @repubblesmcglonky8990 8 месяцев назад +10

      Same with "Arefu" from Fallout 3, which came from a Highway Sign that once read "Careful, Lanes Merging" or something like that

    • @jonahulichny9874
      @jonahulichny9874 8 месяцев назад +5

      @@repubblesmcglonky8990 or river city, heck for all its logical faults megaton has a pretty good name as well.

    • @oz_jones
      @oz_jones 8 месяцев назад +5

      @@jonahulichny9874 I assume this was a typo since it's a Rivet City and it's clever since it's on a beached ship that has lots of rivets.

    • @jonahulichny9874
      @jonahulichny9874 8 месяцев назад

      @@oz_jones yea it was auto correct.

  • @marcossoares6199
    @marcossoares6199 2 года назад +1435

    Fun Fact: A lot of places in Brazil have names in tupi language, even in the interior of the country. The thing is the tupi's lived just in the coast of the continent, and not at the interior.
    So people wrongly assume that this names are given by the native that lived there, when actually others tribes, with others languages populated the area.
    The portugueses used the tupis of the coast as guides to colonize the dense forests of the mainland, and for that they learned a litlle of tupi language, and named the places using the names given by these natives guides tupi speakers, witch never went too far inside the country before.
    So, these places aren't named by the original natives, or even the colonizers, but by the guides witch never lived in the region.
    (If you read this, thanks, its 6 a.m. and I'm super bored, writing fun facts on YT videos just to not sleep again)

    • @GamesXanimeX3
      @GamesXanimeX3 2 года назад +52

      Daí isso se resulta em certos nomes que nem Ipanema = Lugar feio e Tapuia = Não gente/humano lol

    • @setlerking
      @setlerking 2 года назад +57

      @Facepalm Full O' Napalm the Iroquois aren’t even a tribe. It’s a nation of several tribes who banded together because they spoke similar languages and all lived in longhouses. Their name is the haudenosaunee (the people of the longhouse).

    • @eagletgriff
      @eagletgriff 2 года назад +34

      This reminds me of a one story where colonizers tried to talk to natives. The natives replied with a word, which in their language means "i dont understand what youre saying." Because the colonizers didnt understand either, they named that place after the word the natives used lmao. I cant remember the specifics though

    • @antaresbaillet7044
      @antaresbaillet7044 2 года назад +3

      That is a very dope fun fact

    • @irmaosmatos4026
      @irmaosmatos4026 2 года назад +3

      São Paulo was a jesuitic village, this the paulistas (from São Paulo) were indigenous descendants, and probably all spoke Língua Geral, meaning they were just naming things after their common language.

  • @bkr_vids
    @bkr_vids 4 года назад +3017

    Longest place name in Wales: “Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch”
    Which translates to: “St Mary's Church in the Hollow of the White Hazel near a Rapid Whirlpool and the Church of St. Tysilio near the Red Cave.”

    • @skyewalker5176
      @skyewalker5176 4 года назад +425

      So Welsh names are a GPS/map of the location?? Wild

    • @julietagimenez8065
      @julietagimenez8065 4 года назад +237

      Why does that look like a keyboard smash I'm concerned--

    • @SillierIlya
      @SillierIlya 4 года назад +213

      This wasn't naturally named though - falls into the power category - it was renamed when it got a railway station attract tourism. It's generally referred to as Llanfair or Llanfair PG. So i guess that's another part of the naming at work.

    • @darksev.6468
      @darksev.6468 4 года назад +122

      Taumatawhakatangihangakoauauotamateaturipukakapikimaungahoronukupokai: Am I a joke to you?

    • @realmless4193
      @realmless4193 4 года назад +28

      Why not call it "Hazel Cave Church"

  • @gh0s7-704
    @gh0s7-704 4 года назад +2379

    There's a pretty good place name near where I live: Breedon on the Hill. Bree, of course meaning hill, and don, of course, meaning hill, and hill, of course, meaning hill. Breedon on the Hill literally means hill hill on the hill.

    • @jaspermoth1145
      @jaspermoth1145 4 года назад +219

      That's beautiful

    • @randomcommenter7343
      @randomcommenter7343 4 года назад +164

      Moon Moon involved into River River, which bowed to its master of Hill Hill on the Hill

    • @dargondude2375
      @dargondude2375 4 года назад +78

      Heh. Breed on hill

    • @runningcommentary2125
      @runningcommentary2125 4 года назад +47

      Hilly McHillface

    • @judecca666
      @judecca666 4 года назад +111

      I can see the name became shorter in the future and they drop "on the" to be just "Breedonhill" or Hill hill hill

  • @bobjones27276
    @bobjones27276 2 года назад +283

    What you can also do while naming places is think about miscommunication, for example Canada was named Canada after an indigenous word that means village but the Europeans thought that was the name of the place and started to call it Canada (it was also called New-France and later New-England for a while though).

    • @Krixwell
      @Krixwell Год назад +44

      Second largest country in the world. "Ah yes, that one village."

    • @roonilwazlib9877
      @roonilwazlib9877 Год назад +13

      I heard they named it by pulling letters out of a hat. "C, eh? N, eh? D, eh?"

    • @curple3
      @curple3 Год назад +12

      another example would be yucatan; when the spanish arrived there, they asked the natives who, since they obviously didn't know spanish, replied with "we don't understand"

    • @utej.k.bemsel4777
      @utej.k.bemsel4777 Год назад +22

      There is a joke in Germany, why Canada/Kanada is called so...
      The first european settlers saw no indigenous people and said: " Kaana da!" (Keiner da! = Nobody there!)

  • @SSgtJ0hns0n
    @SSgtJ0hns0n 2 года назад +477

    Singapore had its name evolve from myths and legends before being renamed by colonial overlords. Temasek is one of the oldest known names for the region, before the fall of the Majapahit (no one can pinpoint the exact etymology behind the name today).
    Then according to legend, some prince called Sang Nila Utama 'discovered' the island and renamed it "Singapura" (singa=lion; pura=city or port) because he allegedly saw one roar at him after he landed (he and his advisors must have been high though, since the region has no recorded sightings of lions ever. Plently of tigers though).
    Then the British came by did some colonial stuff and adjusted the name to "Singapore" probably cuz it reduces the sylables by one.
    Singapore is the official name used today; Singapura in Malay documentiation or coats of arms; Temasek as a legacy name in places, buildings, streets, etc.
    It's fun breaking down names and the history behind them, especially for the places you live in.

    • @metrifiko_mag
      @metrifiko_mag Год назад +16

      In Portugal we still call Singapura cause it’s easier to say it in our language. I think it’s because of how we pronounce vowels. It’s closer to our Latin origins

    • @siddharthchoudhary6333
      @siddharthchoudhary6333 Год назад +3

      Actually that 'g' was pronounced as 'h' nearly 400 years ago

    • @carlfromaccounting1112
      @carlfromaccounting1112 Год назад +17

      lion roars are known for being very dissapointing so its very likely, in my opinion, that they heard a tiger roar and just mistook it for a lion

    • @felipeaugusto2600
      @felipeaugusto2600 Год назад +3

      Funny that in portuguese, it is actually refered to as Singapura.

    • @SafavidAfsharid3197
      @SafavidAfsharid3197 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@metrifiko_magsingapura or singha pura comes from Sanskrit.

  • @thevoidlookspretty7079
    @thevoidlookspretty7079 4 года назад +863

    “No flag, no name!”
    Reminds me of a wise saying by Blue from OSP:
    “If a flag isn’t waving, its ripe for enslaving.”

    • @Paula-bu8cf
      @Paula-bu8cf 4 года назад +57

      I feel terrible for laughing at that

    • @ObligedUniform
      @ObligedUniform 4 года назад +69

      "No flag, no country, you cant have one!"- Eddie Izzard.

    • @Ozgand
      @Ozgand 4 года назад +16

      @@ObligedUniform This is the comment I was looking for.
      For anyone unfamiliar, I offer you this.
      ruclips.net/video/_9W1zTEuKLY/видео.html

    • @Troglodytarum
      @Troglodytarum 4 года назад +10

      @@ObligedUniform This guy gets the reference.

    • @dracelt8676
      @dracelt8676 4 года назад +3

      @@ObligedUniform I loved that Eddie Izzard bit, thank you for the memory.

  • @lindenlynx
    @lindenlynx 4 года назад +892

    Omashu was literally just named after Oma and Shu's ship name and I love that.

    • @ecthelion1735
      @ecthelion1735 4 года назад +62

      Also Budapest. Was once two cities: Buda and Pest.

    • @jeannebouwman1970
      @jeannebouwman1970 4 года назад +11

      @@ecthelion1735 wasn't Budapest also called Pestbuda in history?

    • @MrFelblood
      @MrFelblood 3 года назад +33

      @@jeannebouwman1970 It's like how it took people a while to agree that AppleDash just sounds better than RainbowJack.

    • @Fede_uyz
      @Fede_uyz 3 года назад +20

      Imagine naming a city "kataang"

    • @vaiyt
      @vaiyt 3 года назад +7

      @@jeannebouwman1970 i guess budapest stuck because buda was a higher class town than pest

  • @alexross1816
    @alexross1816 Год назад +15

    There's a place in Delaware called "Murderkill River."
    It was originally called "Modder Kille" meaning "Muddy River" which sounded similar to "Moeder Kill" meaning "Mother River."
    By the time the English got to it, they named it "Murderkill River."

  • @Midnight_BRAZIL
    @Midnight_BRAZIL Год назад +42

    I always think about a cemetery in Brazil called "Cemitério da Saudade"; the word "saudade" doesn't have a direct translation (it can have multiple meanings depending on the phrase) but here it's like that burning sensation of missing someone you'll never be able to see again, so it's like "Cemetery of the felling of missing someone you loved" and it's poetic and deep 😔

    • @kbye2321
      @kbye2321 7 месяцев назад +2

      Longing?

    • @scalkin
      @scalkin 6 месяцев назад +1

      Grief

    • @julystrauss
      @julystrauss 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@scalkin but you can also feel "saudade" for things and people you know you're going to see again. Grief is different, the overall meaning is heavier, idk

    • @scalkin
      @scalkin 6 месяцев назад

      @@julystrauss idk man just sounds like grief to me

    • @scalkin
      @scalkin 6 месяцев назад

      ​no wait i figured it out, it's depression

  • @antoinemonks4187
    @antoinemonks4187 4 года назад +127

    One of my favourite exonyms is in "The War of the Worlds." Humans refer to the alien invaders as "Martians" and due to the nature of the conflict we never discover what the aliens call themselves.

  • @sauron7839
    @sauron7839 4 года назад +405

    And then 'Hivenfalls Polm' becomes a great city, the waterfall is destroyed when the river is redirected, and it becomes a great regional capitol known as 'Polm'

    • @BadassRandomness
      @BadassRandomness 4 года назад +16

      I love that

    • @SirAroace
      @SirAroace 4 года назад +106

      More accurately given that logic it be more likely the name would change to Hivenfalls (or just Hiven) as the people would not know what that word means but do know Polm means water, a element that no longer exists.

    • @ADawoodKiwi
      @ADawoodKiwi 4 года назад +18

      But if they don't know what Hivenfalls means why would they remove it when the waterfall is destroyed?

    • @TomorrowWeLive
      @TomorrowWeLive 4 года назад +2

      *capital

    • @jameshendry1132
      @jameshendry1132 4 года назад +11

      And then it gets taken over by a group of people who cannot pronounce the letter L and substitutes all Ls with Rs so the city is now known as "Porn" lololololololololol

  • @maciejlubaczewski7815
    @maciejlubaczewski7815 3 года назад +151

    As for Omashu combined name: a similar thing happened in the Polish capital. Legend has it that a knight called Wars fell in love with a mermaid named Sava, and now people live in Warszawa (w=v), which emblem is the mermaid. By the way, I've always found it curious how accurate the English translation is: Warsaw did indeed see many wars.

    • @pawelkoziol9544
      @pawelkoziol9544 Год назад +6

      It is a late legend though, and the problem with it is that Sava is a male Ukrainian name. Wars (Varsh) is legit, and originally the name meant just "a village of Wars/owned by Wars"

    • @egg_2705
      @egg_2705 Год назад +15

      ​@@pawelkoziol9544I doubt mermaids care much about what gender human names have 😅
      Just take the legend and stop picking it apart. It's a legend and not historical fact for a reason.

    • @sashaxenda7557
      @sashaxenda7557 9 месяцев назад +1

      Never did I know this… Fascinating
      Hi from ukrainian!

    • @AverageSkavenEnjoyer
      @AverageSkavenEnjoyer 2 месяца назад

      Honestly the name Warsaw is super badass

  • @arcticbanana66
    @arcticbanana66 Год назад +59

    There's the popular legend, which I don't know if it's true, of how a census taker was going around getting the names of the settlements in Alaska, and was told this one town didn't have a name yet so he wrote "No name" on his map, but the cartographers misread his handwriting when they were making the official map and that's how the town wound up being called Nome.

    • @pawelkoziol9544
      @pawelkoziol9544 Год назад

      The best census story I heard is about weird fiction writer E.T.A. Hoffman, who worked in Warsaw as an office worker in the beginning of the XIXth century, when modern naming custom of using first name and family name was enforced. Allegedly, he made quite a business of giving names to the Jews, aking them to pay for "expensive" names like Goldstein or Rubinstein.

    • @EnderShot
      @EnderShot 6 месяцев назад

      Nome I love it. It’s like saying name and no at the same time

    • @davids.4431
      @davids.4431 3 месяца назад

      A census taker once tried to test me...

  • @Jebbtube
    @Jebbtube 4 года назад +692

    "Ohio" also means "river".
    So the Ohio River also means "River river."

    • @ThatSpecificIndividual
      @ThatSpecificIndividual 4 года назад +125

      Is everyone ignoring the fact that Sahara literally means desert.

    • @Jebbtube
      @Jebbtube 4 года назад +5

      @@QualityPen Genius!

    • @KateeAngel
      @KateeAngel 4 года назад +11

      @Joshua N. Ajang yeah. Belgrad for example. I can guess it means "white city" in Serbian. In Russia there is Belgorod and it means that

    • @sweetdaydreamer8868
      @sweetdaydreamer8868 4 года назад +4

      @@KateeAngel Belgrade in Serbian is *Beograd* (Beo-white Grad-city)

    • @peachesandcream8753
      @peachesandcream8753 4 года назад +7

      Panda means bear so a Panda Bear is a bear bear.

  • @martinberlese
    @martinberlese 4 года назад +465

    Or, you could take another city name, add "new" to it and BAM! new city.

    • @spaghettification8658
      @spaghettification8658 4 года назад +46

      Or just follow in the footsteps of the founders of London, Ontario and don't change the original name at all!

    • @MissCracker
      @MissCracker 4 года назад +23

      New Orleans 😂

    • @mytiliss682
      @mytiliss682 4 года назад +14

      Combine it with prefix and you could name a city new new, like New Novolondon. Or maybe even postfix, though I don't know if any language make new words this way.

    • @mohdghazali3473
      @mohdghazali3473 4 года назад +7

      @@mytiliss682 Well in my country of Malaysia, when the southern state of Johor made a new state's capital they called it "Johor Bahru". They added "Bahru" which mean new in our language so that people could distinct the name of the state's capital and the state itself. This mean Johor Bahru mean New Johor.
      It was how our language work like for example Bukit Nenas mean Pineapple Hill but a realy straight up direct translation would be Hill Pineapple (Hill of Pineapple) since Bukit mean Hill and Nenas mean Pineapple.
      We also have one state in the east coast of the peninsular called Kelantan which was a simplification of it's original long name which came from the old form of the local dialect (as the local dialect there also continue evolved) and at one point on it's history the tragedy fall the rullling dynasty which end up dividing the state and a warlord from Pattani came to unified the state and established a new rulling dynasty the Kelantan. Since the old capital of the Kelantan was destroyed alongside the fall of the old dynasty, a new capital was established and it was simply name "Kota Bharu" mean new fort or new city which the name remain until nowaday and it was still the capital of the state of Kelantan.
      Well if you noticed the different spelling of Bharu and Bahru, both name appear at different time which mean the spelling evolved.

    • @shakirashipslied9721
      @shakirashipslied9721 4 года назад +1

      Just steal names.

  • @roxii7190
    @roxii7190 Год назад +41

    Wow that was really enriching! This reminded me of three examples in my country, Saudi Arabia:-
    1-Naming based on Geography:
    The city that I live in is called Yanbu, and it's actually a verb that means "something that springs" in Arabic since the area is known for having many water springs in the past that have dried out. (Fun Fact: I once told my sister that if it was an English-named town I would name it Windy Shore, as it's a costal city that is mostly windy, she laughed and said that's a cringe video game name :).)
    2-Naming based on Legends:
    There is another famous costal city named Jeddah, some say it was driven from the Arabic word "Jaddah" that means Grandmother. Legend has it that when Eve died she was buried in this land, hence the name as she is the Grandmother for all humankind :).
    3-Naming based on Historical Events:
    The second holiest city in Islam after Makkah is called Madinah, the city originally was called "Yathrib" (whitch wasn't a very nice name) but it was the only city that accepted the migration of Muslims from Makkah as the rulers of Makkah made them flee, when the Prophet arrived to the city he named it "Al-Madinah Al-Monawarah" which literally translates to "The Enlightened City" to honor and bless it, now to simplify it people just call it Al Madinah "The City".

  • @Gregsplays
    @Gregsplays 2 года назад +124

    So, i've tried to apply this kinda to my own scifi setting. The capital of this interstellar republic is called Miara Cora. The name comes from the fact that 1. the nation is about 300 years old, and 2. they named a lot of stuff after explorers. Miara is the name Mia, the a coming from the French particle to mean "at" (essentially Mia-a-cora). The predominantly english speaking crew of the UNS reliant found this difficult to pronounce, so over time the name "Miara" took place, slowly devolving later on into Mara Cora. The Cora suffix is a term thought up by the three explorers who discovered this small subsystem of planets in the Prycon system. Because of this, the two other planets were named Srednyaya Cora (Middle Cora (it being the central planet in the sub-system) in Russian) and Dreianna Cora (this planet was the third discovered, funnily by a women named Anna, most of the English cosmonauts naming it "Anna's Third" or "Third of Anna" which was very badly translated into "Drei" (Three) Anna, the Cora suffix again added to specify that it's in the Cora Subsystem. The reason the languages are so muddled is because at the time, and up to now, the Republic in this book is massively multicultural and cosmopolitan, coming from an era when the UN managed to somewhat loosely unify the earth and explore the stars.

    • @creeper7ech520
      @creeper7ech520 Год назад +1

      I love the sound of it! Although that must have been a pain to work out

    • @amandaslough125
      @amandaslough125 Год назад +1

      That's so cool you put in the effort for this.

  • @arlielee2148
    @arlielee2148 3 года назад +693

    "Names in your fictional land aren't just Big Battle" stares at how the town that is where the Battle of Hastings happened is literally called Battle

    • @paulgibbon5991
      @paulgibbon5991 2 года назад +61

      Yo dawg, I heard you liked battles.

    • @TonySpike
      @TonySpike 2 года назад +18

      Yeah i was thinking the same thing when he said it, their is litterally a place called battle near hastings lol

    • @gabrielp4392
      @gabrielp4392 2 года назад +32

      The Battle of Battle

    • @sirkeeper2885
      @sirkeeper2885 Год назад +20

      "Batalha", Battle in Portuguese, is a town founded after and around a Monastery that was built to give thanks for a victory in a very important battle.

    • @lolloblue9646
      @lolloblue9646 Год назад +15

      In the region of Veneto in Italy there are many towns which have "della battaglia" after their name. It means "of the battle" and it was added after WW1 and the battles of the Piave river.

  • @evo_is_confused
    @evo_is_confused 3 года назад +613

    Me, thinking of my planet names in a sci-fi fantasy setting literally just going by what sounds semi-ancient and cool.
    "Yeah, step by step process,"

    • @Starfloofle
      @Starfloofle 2 года назад +46

      Sci-fi is a complicated can of worms since you've basically got the entire set of steps, across an entire world, and it's already happened, and it's spread out beyond their home
      The scope is positively ludicrous and it's incredibly hard to go down into step-by-step creation for a space-age society beyond the critical points because of how much culture is represented by an entire planet. You gotta remember, you could host an entire campaign on just one island on that entire world, let alone a continent, *let alone the world* and that's assuming it even *has* continents.
      It can help to do it for some things but trying to do it overall is an exercise in insanity lol

    • @dragolia1603
      @dragolia1603 2 года назад +11

      Me who just gets a idea then searches up baby names that had its meaning: HOW

    • @nyalan8385
      @nyalan8385 Год назад +3

      You could literally just name each planet whatever the word for Dirt, Ocean or Home is in the dominant cultures home. Or if it's mostly uninhabited you could simply just copy an actual planets name, for instance: HD 224693 b. That's a planet name and is unlikely to change, or if the planet is a hot spot for mining or something, it could have a colloquial name, such as "Herdee Twenty Two B" or something that rolls off the tongue a lot easier than HD 224693 b

    • @team_ribs
      @team_ribs Год назад

      Maybe name it 2nd earth in your language and then have descriptors as the rest

    • @ffc1a28c7
      @ffc1a28c7 Год назад +2

      You can also play around with vowel shifts. literally just draw a couple lines on the IPA chart from a naming lang (devolve by bringing some towards a "centre", diverge to evolve). Can do the same thing with consonants, just shift them around on the chart to where they make sense (following general conlang rules).

  • @williamwells434
    @williamwells434 2 года назад +22

    As a world-builder, naming places is probably my favorite part. In one of my worldbuilding projects, the Naufrages, the people intentionally named places with bad/forboding/off-putting names after liberating themselves from Portuguese rule. So there cities are called Condenaçao (Condemnation), Tempestadt (Storm city), Iscariot (as in Judas), et cetera

    • @williamwells434
      @williamwells434 2 года назад +2

      After the mixed Portuguese, Galician, Xhosa, Dutch, and Zulu population rejected Portuguese rule, they then tried to emulate and attract the then-Dutch Republic. So they decided rename their capital city of Santa Isabela. They fused Latin tempesta with -stad (or -stadt).

  • @shanechudzik8554
    @shanechudzik8554 2 года назад +53

    After watching this, I took all the advice and wrote a piece of world building that I am more proud of than nearly any other work that I have ever done. I only wish I could thank Hello Future Me for all the with he's done.

  • @WindspriteM
    @WindspriteM 4 года назад +628

    A lot of exonyms broadly mean: "the people who speak weirdly"
    Barbarians, basically.
    The word for Germany in most Slavic languages originated from a word that meant: "mute" or "speechless" because those were the people they couldn't communicate with, while some communication could be done with speakers of other slavic languages.
    In Germanic languages, a word with a similar origin is "welsh", and it's applied differently in Germany and England.
    The English named the nearest people living to them that they couldn't understand, the Welsh, while the Germans often used almost the same word ("Welsch") to refer to people who spoke romance languages (especially French) and the areas they lived in ("Welschland" could refer to France, french-speaking Switzerland or Italy).
    The language of travelling peoples was also referred to as "welsch"
    "Kauderwelsch reden" means "talking incomprehensible nonsense" in German.
    I find this very fascinating, because it's just so revealing about how universally ignorant people can be independent of where they're from, if they can't communicate with another group of people.

    • @TVeldhorst
      @TVeldhorst 4 года назад +24

      Thats interesting! In Dutch the translation of 'Kauterwelsch' is 'koeterwaals'. Waals is also the language people speak in the Frech part of Belgium: Wallon.

    • @handlebarfox2366
      @handlebarfox2366 4 года назад +64

      and the word 'barbarian' comes from Greeks writing off foreigners speaking their language as just saying "barbarbarbar"

    • @Luey_Luey
      @Luey_Luey 4 года назад +14

      "Wallachia" also derives from this same root, as does 'Vlach'

    • @dernwine
      @dernwine 3 года назад +6

      "Und ob mein Hertz im tote bricht
      wirst du och drum ein welscher nicht. "

    • @TheMikiomi
      @TheMikiomi 3 года назад +14

      Wow so wales is literally named for speaking incomprehensibly

  • @christiegreenwood2642
    @christiegreenwood2642 4 года назад +395

    In Germany, you have a plethora of places called "big" or "small" something, such as Groß Hesepe and Klein Hesepe.

    • @christinaVennegerts
      @christinaVennegerts 2 года назад +21

      Of all the places named in this comments section, I hadn't thought I would stumble over my neighboring towns :D

    • @christiegreenwood2642
      @christiegreenwood2642 2 года назад +8

      @@christinaVennegerts 8D. I happen to live in the region, too. Also, fun fact: virologist Christian Drosten is a Groß Hesepe native.

    • @presidentialsystemenjoyer9194
      @presidentialsystemenjoyer9194 2 года назад +3

      what's the meaning of burg? i saw some of places have burg in their names end

    • @christiegreenwood2642
      @christiegreenwood2642 2 года назад +8

      @@presidentialsystemenjoyer9194 It means "stronghold", or "city" if you look up the etymology of the suffix. It's present in several Germanic languages, including Anglo-Saxon and Old High German.

    • @user-ed7et3pb4o
      @user-ed7et3pb4o 2 года назад +6

      In England, we have lots of 'Greater' and 'Lesser'/'Little' places too.

  • @arianae1993
    @arianae1993 2 года назад +38

    We have a city in Peru call Callao, because the conquistadors thought that was it's name. It actually means "little sibling" because it was the smaller city next to a bigger city call collana or "big sibling"

  • @elijahschafer1274
    @elijahschafer1274 Год назад +14

    After years of worldbuilding, I've found that when I make up words for names, I have a specific style. Like, what consonants or vowels I use and how they're combined. Makes me feel like I have a legacy in my works and a unifying style.

  • @Xikiruen
    @Xikiruen 4 года назад +227

    In Chile we have the “norte chico” and “norte grande” literally little north and big north

    • @trla6505
      @trla6505 4 года назад +14

      @@QualityPen yes, it meants both, i think it goes something like this
      chico =small
      Children= are small
      Chico= children

    • @Xikiruen
      @Xikiruen 4 года назад +8

      Slavik Chukhlebov yes is one of the many words with more than one meaning it all depends of the context chico could mean small, boy, budy, and probably more things that I’m not remembering now

    • @vaiyt
      @vaiyt 3 года назад +6

      Norte chicoooooooooo

    • @whafflete6721
      @whafflete6721 3 года назад +7

      @@vaiyt Middle east is getting complicated,maybe it's because it's in the middle of the east?

    • @mayoandbananasandwich6527
      @mayoandbananasandwich6527 3 года назад +5

      in Stall even crazier space dust

  • @jewboi2137
    @jewboi2137 4 года назад +489

    >making a video on art of naming things
    >being called Tim

    • @patrickardagh-walter6609
      @patrickardagh-walter6609 4 года назад +88

      Some call him... Tim.

    • @Spacoy
      @Spacoy 4 года назад +52

      @@patrickardagh-walter6609 Others also might call him... Tim

    • @commentercommentypants7904
      @commentercommentypants7904 4 года назад +22

      Tim's a beautiful name for a beautiful good boy, I don't know what you're talking about.

    • @elpretender1357
      @elpretender1357 4 года назад +9

      But Tim is an abbreviation of his first name

    • @randomcommenter7343
      @randomcommenter7343 4 года назад +32

      @@elpretender1357 Timopher? Tim-tim? Timmy? Timathan? I give up.

  • @ThePageTurnerPT
    @ThePageTurnerPT 3 года назад +47

    "Orcland and New Zealand, yeah, land of the orcs." I love this line because it's subtle and if you blink you miss it, but I see you and I appreciate you

    • @Eidolon1andOnly
      @Eidolon1andOnly Год назад +5

      He said "Auckland in New Zealand" not "Orcland and New Zealand"

    • @ThePageTurnerPT
      @ThePageTurnerPT Год назад

      @Eidolon Ooooooh, so I just heard HORRIFICALLY wrong. Noted and I thank you for the correction!

    • @oz_jones
      @oz_jones 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@Eidolon1andOnly But that was indeed the joke he was going for, so Pageturner was half right.

  • @quisquiliarum7710
    @quisquiliarum7710 2 года назад +40

    "half of America calls all fizzy drinks coke"
    as an american:
    What?

    • @blurdrawsart
      @blurdrawsart 2 года назад +1

      It’s mostly the Midwest/Central part of the US

    • @sunnyboi3867
      @sunnyboi3867 2 года назад +4

      @@blurdrawsart From what I've seen, only really the south calls soft drinks coke. The Midwest mostly refers to it as pop, but weirdly enough I've only heard soda used when the drink is like a fruit flavor, like it would be "Can I have an orange soda?" Instead of "Can I have an orange pop?" That's just my experience though.

    • @blurdrawsart
      @blurdrawsart 2 года назад

      @Danzard There's also two kinds of Midwesterners. You have the more northern midwest and the more southern midwest.

    • @SomeYank9
      @SomeYank9 2 года назад +2

      As a Midwesterner from Indiana, it’s mostly just 40+ year olds who say pop. The rest of us mostly just say soda.

    • @cornycontent1915
      @cornycontent1915 2 года назад +1

      Yeah, Brits dont know crap

  • @christiansrensen5958
    @christiansrensen5958 3 года назад +542

    "you can't name it treeland"
    Holland: Hold my clogs...
    Holt= wood
    Cognate with our German word Holz

    • @dutchdoggo
      @dutchdoggo 3 года назад +22

      i think the name Holland (which is a province and not the name of the country btw) comes from "Hol" meaning low(?) same goes for the countries name "Nederland" Neder literally meaning Low so its "Lowland"

    • @christiansrensen5958
      @christiansrensen5958 3 года назад +5

      @@dutchdoggo Dat weet ik, is'n scherts 😋 aber wirklich het heet Holt-land (het hout). Ik kom uit Hamburg, wij praaten Platt. Ich kenn auf jeden Fall Nederland :).
      Aber ja, Holland wirklich heißt Holt-land (het hout) dat is zieker.
      nl.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holland

    • @christiansrensen5958
      @christiansrensen5958 2 года назад +1

      @Platypus haha ne, neder is ook duits (nieder). Holland is Synekdoche, dat heet een deel geeft ook het geheel aan. Bijv. brood voor maaltijd.

    • @Jack-rk7jc
      @Jack-rk7jc 2 года назад +7

      hollywood = woodwood?

    • @christiansrensen5958
      @christiansrensen5958 2 года назад +4

      @@Jack-rk7jc hollen is old germanic meaning to prick. Holly bushes (prevalent in the area, the origin of the name) are prickly. So Hollywood is prickly wood/bushes.

  • @alexandercuenin
    @alexandercuenin 4 года назад +120

    0:59 - How Names Start
    6:26 - How Names Change
    9:38 - Power
    14:28 - Migration
    15:56 - Example Use of this Naming Process
    17:44 - Summary & Outro

  • @NastyCupid
    @NastyCupid 2 года назад +22

    10:08 , one of the given meanings of Istanbul is that it refers to ''eis tèn polin'' (to the city) which was the way the Greeks referred to Constantinople, since it had no real rival as a metropolis at the time the people simply referred to it as ''the city''.

  • @onceuponatimeandspace
    @onceuponatimeandspace Год назад +14

    Three years later and the whole Divine Falls - > Hivenfalls Polm is still an incredible example on how to use the lessons learned in the video

  • @KingBobXVI
    @KingBobXVI 3 года назад +100

    "The Holy Waterfall of Water"
    Checks out

    • @protojager
      @protojager 2 года назад +3

      I mean, i would prefer a waterfall of blood, but that's why i pray to the blood god.

  • @bevanfindlay
    @bevanfindlay 4 года назад +350

    "Auckland, New Zealand, the place of the orcs". Well played. 🤣

    • @kazikmajster5650
      @kazikmajster5650 2 года назад +3

      Auckland = Orcland if you pronounce correctly.

    • @timnosgirg7017
      @timnosgirg7017 2 года назад

      @@kazikmajster5650 I come from Auckland haha it does sound the same.

    • @oz_jones
      @oz_jones 8 месяцев назад

      @@kazikmajster5650 That indeed was the joke.

  • @lghtngblt
    @lghtngblt 3 года назад +35

    Small "city" I used to live in was called Lacey's Spring after three Lacey brothers discovered a clear spring that would provide their settlement with clean drinking water.

  • @nicomultilocke
    @nicomultilocke 2 года назад +28

    This video singlehanded convinced me to buy your book. The whole "Hivenfalls Polm" thing is the best thing I've heard this month.

  • @purplepoet6147
    @purplepoet6147 4 года назад +264

    I named my world "Jai Vendaris" which translates to "The home of Vendaris", Vendaris being the god who created the world, and Jai, meaning 'home' or 'dwelling place'

    • @spaghetto9836
      @spaghetto9836 2 года назад +17

      I wish I had your creativity, lol.

    • @Lukasafer
      @Lukasafer 2 года назад +18

      Hey if you have a time or power change it could be Jaidaris
      If there's anything humans are known for: laziness lol

    • @AnnoyingAllie3
      @AnnoyingAllie3 2 года назад +2

      Maybe call it Jaider, names usually change, like a home 🏠 used to be called a ham

    • @nyalan8385
      @nyalan8385 Год назад +6

      @@spaghetto9836 I think the issue is being too creative. When coming up with names I often get way too caught up in my own head trying to think of a smart name for it, when in reality I should be thinking "this town has been here for a while so the people would call it Old Town"

    • @nocturne.nocturnal
      @nocturne.nocturnal Год назад

      I named the main world of my story "Araltor", after the god who created it. I'm still working on why it has the name of its creator

  • @SheWhoWalksSilently
    @SheWhoWalksSilently 4 года назад +197

    Welcome to Camp Greenlake
    “Where’s the lake?”
    Hehehe

  • @alleycat2297
    @alleycat2297 2 года назад +2

    I'm new to worldbuilding and aside from enjoying your channel and videos, I've got to say I really appreciate you putting these part by part recaps/summaries at the end of your videos. I take a lot of notes when I watch your 'on worldbuilding' series and it's been really efficient to just be able to take the pointers you list out at the end of each of them. Especially given how in-depth some of these topics can be. Thank you and keep up the fantastic work!

  • @Vinemaple
    @Vinemaple Год назад +2

    This stuff is pure gold. Even all the stuff I've already figured out for myself is really encouraging to hear, mostly because of how you bring it up and connect it with other things I've never thought of.

  • @MalachiCo0
    @MalachiCo0 4 года назад +1380

    A breakdown of the English topographic feature of "Pendle Hill"
    Pen = Brythonic word for hill
    Dl = A corruption of the Old English word for hill
    Literally we call this place "Hill Hill Hill"

    • @eelsemaj99
      @eelsemaj99 4 года назад +36

      Emperor Pepe Flavius Memus it is the duty of whoever is the next dominant language to do that

    • @matthewparker9276
      @matthewparker9276 4 года назад +31

      Pendlehill Hill

    • @MalachiCo0
      @MalachiCo0 4 года назад +3

      @S S Oh gosh

    • @MalachiCo0
      @MalachiCo0 4 года назад +6

      @@eelsemaj99 yes, for the meme

    • @ElliotKeaton
      @ElliotKeaton 3 года назад +17

      Sahara means desert.
      Desert Desert.

  • @elliart7432
    @elliart7432 4 года назад +1667

    big pet peeve: When capitals are just named "the capital"

    • @jebatman756
      @jebatman756 4 года назад +201

      How about "The City"? Which actually happens in real life? People living close to NYC just call it "the city", I'm sure this happens in the vicinity of other big cities too

    • @elliart7432
      @elliart7432 4 года назад +135

      @@jebatman756 true, I'm more talking about when you literally hear no other name

    • @TheHazelnoot
      @TheHazelnoot 4 года назад +316

      Tokyo: East capital.
      Kyoto: Capital city.

    • @elliart7432
      @elliart7432 4 года назад +44

      Julianne Stingray well alright I guess, I didn’t know that was actually something that happened in real life

    • @TheHazelnoot
      @TheHazelnoot 4 года назад +146

      @@elliart7432 It does happen, yeah. It's just that there are so many different languages that what seems like a fancy, neat name could be the simplest, most plain thing you can imagine.

  • @setlerking
    @setlerking 2 года назад

    This is legitimately one of the best, most concise and most helpful videos on place names, but also world building generally. Thanks my dude, gonna recommend this to people going forward. Excellent *chef’s kiss*

  • @jaratea1248
    @jaratea1248 Год назад +5

    The biggest lake in Europe, Lake Geneva, is called by people that actually live by it (and not in the tini-tiny city of Geneva that only takes up 2% of the lake) "the Léman", or sometimes "Lake Léman". Léman comes from the celtic for "lake", so by calling our lake the "Lake Léman" we actually call it the "Lake Lake". Really deep symbolism over here in Switzerland

  • @daisybrain9423
    @daisybrain9423 4 года назад +357

    There is kind of an example of a 'bigger' and 'smaller' something! Big Diomede and Little Diomede, a set of twin islands in the Bering Strait between Russia and Alaska.
    Also, Constantinople would have been a great example of your point if that had actually been what happened :/ Already in Byzantine times, when you were talking about going "to the city" you would have said "eis tin polin" (which is where Istanbul comes from). When the Ottomans conquered Constantinople, the city's name didn't change officially, it was still "Kostantiniyye" in Ottoman Turkish. The official name change happened in 1923 with the foundation of the Republic.
    Amazing video idea, keep it up!
    PS: In part 2 of this, you need to mention Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch in Wales and Y in France.

    • @gokbay3057
      @gokbay3057 4 года назад +33

      Also Great Britain (small Britain being Brittany peninsula of France), Lesser and Greater Poland regions of Poland, and also lots of Islands/Archipelagos are called lesser/greater something (Antilles come to mind). Some branch rivers are called "Small 'name of the main river'".
      Also thanks for saying that Istanbul is actually a Greek name. A lot of people don't know that or the fact that the name Constantinople stayed official until the Republic. New Amsterdam - New York would have been better. Or Tsaristyn - Stalingrad - Volgagrad. Königsberg - Kaliningrad, Pressburg - Bratislava, Leningrad - St. Petersburg. Really there are many much better examples.

    • @lightningcat82
      @lightningcat82 4 года назад +11

      There is also the Big Bend and Little Bend areas in South Dekota.

    • @terilyte3152
      @terilyte3152 4 года назад +7

      @@gokbay3057 Isn't it just called great Britain because it's the largest of the British Isles?

    • @jordansmith1541
      @jordansmith1541 4 года назад +7

      Switzerland has two towns, one called Polliez-le-Grand (Polliez the big) and Polliez-le-Petit (Polliez the small).

    • @jannegrey593
      @jannegrey593 4 года назад +2

      @@gokbay3057 Wasn't it Brittania Magna (or something like that) and Brittania Hybernia? For Bigger Island and Ireland?

  • @ParkerDaiGames
    @ParkerDaiGames 4 года назад +667

    "let's be honest, who does understand Welsh"
    As a Welshman not even we understand Welsh

    • @Redrally
      @Redrally 4 года назад +27

      @@BobDavies1 Slight correction: The first published Bible in Welsh was printed under Elizabeth I. This encouraged people to leave the Catholic Church in droves as they could finally understand the Bible in their own language.

    • @cjs4247
      @cjs4247 3 года назад +17

      @Fflur Efa As someone that speaks English as their first (and only) language, I agree that it is absolute nonsense. Most of the rules only work half the time, nothing is spelled the way it sounds, words can sound the same but be spelled three different ways with their own meanings, and a lot of it is just words we stole from the French and then seemingly decided to pronounce incorrectly just to spite them.

    • @michaelbryant3640
      @michaelbryant3640 3 года назад +39

      @@cjs4247 What's the saying, "English beats up other languages in dark alleys and rifles through their pockets for loose syntax"?

    • @cjs4247
      @cjs4247 3 года назад +10

      @@michaelbryant3640 Yeah that seems about right

    • @chrisbaglin5240
      @chrisbaglin5240 3 года назад +12

      "Lets be honest, who does understand Welsh".
      About half a million of us, including me, coc oen digywilydd.

  • @vinnyvanhoe5614
    @vinnyvanhoe5614 2 года назад

    Thank you so much for recommending world anvil! Such an amazing resource. I urge anyone, especially those like me who are a bit scatter brained and take lose notes to give it a try. The best way I've found to organize details about your world no question

  • @SableFane
    @SableFane Год назад

    I love this as a lesson, how it's compiled, the examples, even the sponsor and how its actually relevant and useful. Solid advice video!

  • @JontyLevine
    @JontyLevine 4 года назад +190

    8:54 "Is there any example of one place called 'bigger thing'?"
    YES! Just down the road from my hometown are two villages called Great Chesterford and Little Chesterford. And many other place names in the region like Great Sampford. Let's also not forget that Great Britain was originally given that name to distinguish it from the Brittany region of France.

    • @gokbay3057
      @gokbay3057 4 года назад +8

      Greater Poland and Lesser Poland exist as well. Also Veliky Novgorod (not sure about the exact spelling but it means Great Novgorod, distinguishing it from Nizhy Novgorod)

    • @isakpalsson9012
      @isakpalsson9012 4 года назад +3

      Near my city there is "Mellösa". Some Miles away? "Stora (Big) Mellösa"

    • @tramrant
      @tramrant 4 года назад +5

      @@gokbay3057 Funny thing about Novgorods is it means NewCity so Velikiy Novgorod is basically Great NewCity)

    • @PolyChromium
      @PolyChromium 4 года назад +11

      He mentioned “greater” and “lesser”, he meant specifically “bigger” and “smaller”. Like, Bigger Chelsea or Smaller New Zealand

    • @mephostopheles3752
      @mephostopheles3752 4 года назад +8

      I think he was asking specifically about a place using the _word_ “Bigger” or “Smaller” in its name, rather than “Great/Greater” or “Lesser.”

  • @OscarMarohn23
    @OscarMarohn23 4 года назад +41

    The northwestern region of France is called Brittany, but to differentiate between that and their British neighbours across the channel the French added "Grande" to the beginning, so you have Bretagne in France and Grande Bretagne is Great Britain.
    (Fun fact to describe a person from Brittany you would call them a Breton, and a British person is a Briton)

    • @thesinfultictac5704
      @thesinfultictac5704 4 года назад

      Yes, they are closer linguistically and genetically to the Bretons than the Gauls.

  • @hannahentz2968
    @hannahentz2968 Год назад

    This is a phenomenal video. I love the simple structure, the attention to detail, and the clear understanding of history, geography and culture that goes into it.

  • @Ry-Ratti
    @Ry-Ratti 10 месяцев назад +2

    I’ve watched a lot of videos on world building and yours has definitely been the most helpful and informative.

  • @moistslippers9726
    @moistslippers9726 4 года назад +162

    YES, THANK YOU I REALLY NEEDED THIS. I’ve been racking my brain for months finding the name of my overall continent. I’ve got towns and cities done, but I’m really hoping this will help!

    • @josephujoostaa4462
      @josephujoostaa4462 4 года назад +2

      Good luck!

    • @moistslippers9726
      @moistslippers9726 4 года назад +5

      Lettukana thanks! I’m finding it really difficult to find a name that is disconnected from all of my worlds cultures and different languages. 😞

    • @lilpeach101
      @lilpeach101 4 года назад +6

      @@moistslippers9726 Maybe let different cultures have their own names for the continent?

    • @moistslippers9726
      @moistslippers9726 4 года назад +5

      lilpeach101 huh... that’s actually a really interesting idea. Thanks for that!

    • @mrhalfwit972
      @mrhalfwit972 4 года назад +4

      @@moistslippers9726 ulfricar (northerners) amataria (southerners) a-cranius (outsiders)
      these are just examples, or maybe something simpler
      ulari amunt a-crian and so forth,
      you know what, fuck it, make a whole new language.

  • @julianchancodave
    @julianchancodave 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you for this video! Names of both characters and places have always stumped me when trying to come up with ideas. This was very helpful :)

  • @perlanikaurys8896
    @perlanikaurys8896 3 года назад

    THANK YOU SO MUCH! I needed help creating names for countries and cities in my world; this helps so much!

  • @Ragemuffn
    @Ragemuffn 4 года назад +175

    At least the danes tried to pronounce Eoforwic somewhat instead of giving it a brand new name, good guy invaders.

    • @BonaparteBardithion
      @BonaparteBardithion 4 года назад +30

      You see that in several places in North America too. Washington has at least a dozen large cities (including the three largest) named after either a Native American place or people.
      Seattle is the botched and misspelled version of Chief Si'ahl/Sealth.
      Tacoma is named for Mt. Tahoma, the original name of Mt. Rainier.
      Spokane and Puyallup are both named after local tribes.
      Tons and tons of examples. I don't know if that makes them good guy invaders or if it was just easier to trade and negotiate with the people already there when they used recognizable names.

    • @5h0rgunn45
      @5h0rgunn45 4 года назад +17

      There are loads of places like this in Canada too. Our national capital, our nation's name itself, and almost half of the provinces' names are Anglicised forms of Indigenous names. There's a section of the Trans-Canada Highway called the Yellowhead, which is a translation of an Indigenous nickname for a white explorer who had blonde hair.

    • @CRT.v
      @CRT.v 4 года назад +7

      There are many places like that in the Midwest as well. And I'm sure there are all over the county, too, but most of my knowledge is of the Midwestern place names. Hell, over half of the state names come from Native American roots! 26 states in the US have names taken from or derived from Native American languages (and there's also Hawaii, which comes from, of course, the Hawaiian language, which is in the Polynesian family of languages).

    • @DECODEDVFX
      @DECODEDVFX 4 года назад +6

      @@BonaparteBardithion Yeah, there's loads of this in America. More than half of the state names have a Native American origin.

    • @Monie71793
      @Monie71793 4 года назад

      I'm from Chicago, a place that still somewhat keeps its Native American name, "Chicagoa" (something like that). 😊 It means "stinky onion", I believe. 😂😂😂⚰⚰

  • @green_stalk9259
    @green_stalk9259 4 года назад +339

    May I present the town of ‘Breedon-on-the-hill’, which translates to ‘hill-hill-on-the-hill’

    • @theholyinquisition389
      @theholyinquisition389 4 года назад +53

      Another one would be Lake Chiemsee in Bavaria.
      Translated it means "lake lake lake"

    • @FactoryofRedstone
      @FactoryofRedstone 4 года назад +21

      @@theholyinquisition389 But In German you only say, Chiemsee and drop the Lake at be beginning

    • @FaithfulOfBrigantia
      @FaithfulOfBrigantia 4 года назад +44

      Portugal comes from Portu - Port in Latin and Cale - Port in Gallaecian Celtic
      Therefore, Portugal means PortPort

    • @alejandroojeda1572
      @alejandroojeda1572 4 года назад +12

      Portugal=Port port

    • @tortex1
      @tortex1 4 года назад +9

      You could just drop the first "on" and end up with 'Breed-on-the-hill'. That should screw with some peoples heads.

  • @timbeiter3752
    @timbeiter3752 Год назад +2

    This is so thorough, helpful, fun, and exciting! Such a great video!!!

  • @canadianidiot1220
    @canadianidiot1220 3 года назад +13

    It would be cool to have a vid of the same style about weapons/items/holy relic. Many weapons are given names or change names like Narzil becoming Anduril, amongst other swords in Tolkien’s world

  • @piguyalamode164
    @piguyalamode164 4 года назад +53

    Wow, so my thought to name mars colonies after the rovers they are closest to is actually sensible

    • @howmuchbeforechamp
      @howmuchbeforechamp 4 года назад +7

      Hey look a good idea , not sarcastic ,
      Good on you

    • @fadhil2831
      @fadhil2831 2 года назад +3

      That good idea but i think if russia build Moon/mars Colonies they will the placed after Yuri Gagarin

    • @Emperor_of_all_Badgers
      @Emperor_of_all_Badgers 2 года назад +2

      Sojourner City

  • @ZeeSips
    @ZeeSips 4 года назад +228

    Any plans on making a video about "Character Names", Tim?

    • @Rainbowthewindsage
      @Rainbowthewindsage 4 года назад +29

      I recommend looking into real life names and their meaning. They tend to be phrases in certain languages like tons of names in the Bible. A lot of languages also name children after virtues (Beauty, hope, Strength etc). Or perhaps something that is consider to embody a virtue (I have a warrior culture that likes the name Kuda meaning snake because they admire how quickly snakes strike their enemies). And finally you also have names that spread from different languages and changed pronunciation as it came over and lost common knowledge of meaning (or older names that lost meaning over time). Also worth considering naming conventions, such as order of names, do they have family names or are they given a second after where they are from, or who their father is. Do they ever rename themselves as part of their religion? Sorry this comment is so long, but this is something I find interesting.

    • @ZeeSips
      @ZeeSips 4 года назад +10

      @@Rainbowthewindsage Please don't apologize! I find naming extremely interesting and I really appreciate your comment!

    • @trishapellis
      @trishapellis 4 года назад +11

      Heyyy let's already do a part of the work for him then. Naming convention also depends on ruling power, most Ghanaians seem to have a Biblical first name, a second first name that indicates the day of the week they were born on, and then a last name (and I think I'm forgetting one, it's been a long time since I looked that up). In the Netherlands and Spain you have regions with separate languages and their own names that follow conventions of those languages, so if you have a Frisian or Catalan name, everyone's gonna know where you're from - which might cause you trouble if you ever try to find a job outside of that specific section of your country, so people might actually name their children more traditional names the whole country recognizes for that reason. On the other hand there's people who use traditional local names as an act of rebellion against 'the man' (see Catalonia right now). It's the same reason people from all regions of China might decide to only teach their children Mandarin Chinese (instead of for example Kantonese) and there's a political struggle going on on the island of Aruba, a former Dutch colony, about whether or not Dutch should still be taught in schools, because Aruba isn't a rich place and parents want their children to have the best possible chance at getting a job, possibly in the Netherlands if they manage to go there, and thus also parents who will give their children traditionally Dutch names... which some believe is slowly killing traditional Aruban culture. I've known Dominicans named George even though they knew no word of English for the same reason. Colonialism and wealth are big driving factors. There's a channel here on youtube called Say It Loud that explores black American culture that also has a video on where their names tend to come from (which is kind of surprising in some aspects).

    • @Rainbowthewindsage
      @Rainbowthewindsage 4 года назад +8

      @@trishapellis I completely forgot about day of the week names. Similarly, there are places ( I don't remember specifically where) where your middle name is a Saint based off of what day you were born on, so you have guys with their middle name Maria. Speaking of Middle names and gender specific names, my real life middle name is Michelle and I find it interesting that in english that name is considered female because it sounds feminine in our language, while in French it is a man's name, basically their version of the name Michael. There are other names like Ariel and Lindsey, which were once men's names but now mostly women's, and I am sure there are names that have done the opposite transformation but I can't think of an example off the top of my head.

    • @fairycat23
      @fairycat23 4 года назад +3

      @Quantum Last names can also come from where one's ancestors lived! For example, my own last name has two parts, one which means "small village" and the other which is a suffix meaning "small." I usually take it to mean that my last name means "really tiny village" or "puny village."

  • @spacemarine633
    @spacemarine633 3 года назад +6

    Sometimes ridiculously simple names are just as viable.
    For example: the capital of the german state northrhine westfalia is Düsseldorf. Düssel is the name of the river that flows through it
    Dorf is simply german for village
    So it translates to village by the düssel. Not only does this show how utterly simplistic names can be sometimes (it just describes where it is) it also shows that the name has not changed as it expanded from being a village to becoming the state capital.

  • @synnesilentweb
    @synnesilentweb Год назад +6

    Cornwall is a great example for place names! I take inspiration from the Cornish language a lot when writing fantasy. Most places in Cornwall begin with a prefix, such as Tre (meaning homestead, a town) or Ros (moor, heath) or Pen (a headland). So you have places like Tregony, Roskear, Penryn... No matter where you go in Cornwall, place names can offer you a wealth of information on where you're going. It'll tell you if it's a town, a beach, a moor, or if it has a mine or a church. Which would have been extremely useful for travellers I imagine.
    There's a rhyme which goes: "By tre, pol and pen, you will know the Cornishmen!"

  • @Nikos5310
    @Nikos5310 4 года назад +54

    Fun fact: Istanbul comes from the Greek phrase "εις την Πόλιν" which sounds like "istinpolin" and it meant "to Constantinople". So when Byzantines where saying "I am going to Constantinople" they said "πηγαίνω εις την Πόλιν" which pretty much sounds like . Istinpolin turned into Istanbul and so when someone says "I'm going to Istanbul" he is actually saying "I am going to to Constantinople"... Excuse the bad English please :)

    • @azuregriffin1116
      @azuregriffin1116 4 года назад +1

      I did not notice anything wrong with it. Your English is fine.

    • @machaiarcanum
      @machaiarcanum 4 года назад +5

      Seems all good to me. Although I think ‘Polin’ just means to the city in general, not Constantinople specifically; and if Istanbul means going to the city, then the phrase: I am going to the city of Istanbul kinda means I am going to the city of going to the city. ;)

    • @chestermc9954
      @chestermc9954 4 года назад +1

      @@machaiarcanum Yes, the word "πόλιν"(polin) means city but Constantinople was often referred to as "Η Πόλη"(The City).

    • @machaiarcanum
      @machaiarcanum 4 года назад +3

      @@chestermc9954 Huh. Well I guess you learn something every day. Cheers. I find it hilarious that the city was so well known that people didn’t even name it, if you talked about ‘The City’ everyone knew what you meant.

    • @dirtywhitellama
      @dirtywhitellama 4 года назад

      @@machaiarcanum there are regional cities like that all over. It's pretty common if there's one major city in a rural area for example. "I'm going to the city today", no one is going to ask which one. If you're going somewhere else you'd use the name alone, probably.

  • @douglasphillips5870
    @douglasphillips5870 4 года назад +150

    Imagine two small villages. One by the river had an impressive arch over the door to their town Hall, and they named their community Arch Hamlet. There was a less impressive village inland known for raising goats which was called Goat Hamlet. As time went on the names were shortened to Arkham and Gotham.
    Eventually Arkham grew into a trading hub while Gotham remained a farming community. However there was a cheese maker in Gotham who's famous Gotham cheese was traded through the port at Arkham.
    People started to associate Arkham with the cheese and called it Gotham. To differentiate the thriving metropolis from a goat farm, they changed the name to Gotham City. And now you know the rest of the story.

    • @Rainbowthewindsage
      @Rainbowthewindsage 4 года назад +17

      Is that actually part of the batman lore?

    • @PawanTanaySingh
      @PawanTanaySingh 4 года назад +4

      Kind of doubt it

    • @AllWIllFall2Me
      @AllWIllFall2Me 4 года назад +65

      @@Rainbowthewindsage Not broadly. There are a great many Batman stories that retcon how or why Gotham got its name, but the general one is that Gotham is called that...because that's that the founders decided to call it and that "Arkham" is literally just the name of the family that founded the Asylum, and the ISLAND was renamed due to the asylum being the only thing of note.
      Gotham, however, is, IRL, stealing an old name for New York...which in turn is stealing from a town in England...which IS named for that reason. "Gotham" in Old English is "Goat-home", and is a small town in England that supposedly, centuries ago, learned the king wanted to build a hunting lodge in the region, and (not wanting a royal highway made through their town/to have to deal with a king all the time) all pretended to be idiots when the royal surveyor came to see the town. This started a bunch of jokes about "the Mad/"wise" men of Gotham", which was later used as an insult for other big cities: To call a place "Gotham" was to call the people in it crazy. Washington Irving (the guy who wrote Ichabod Crane) used the joke as a dig at the Mayor of New York, and it kinda stuck.
      So Gotham City in Batman is meant to be a crazier New York full of madmen and darkness, KIND OF based on the idea of "Goat Hamlet".

    • @Rainbowthewindsage
      @Rainbowthewindsage 4 года назад +7

      @@AllWIllFall2Me I see. I was just curious, although I did know that Gotham is to some degree based off of New York, I didn't know it was also an older name for it.

    • @douglasphillips5870
      @douglasphillips5870 4 года назад +3

      @@Rainbowthewindsage Nah, it was just something I made up. Thanks for asking. :)

  • @artloveranimation
    @artloveranimation Год назад

    Your example near the end of how to actually do it was so helpful and makes so much sense.

  • @koffeenkream02
    @koffeenkream02 3 года назад +9

    I think Australia is a really interesting case study. There are places like Queensland (literally 'Queen's Land'), Point Danger (lot of ship wrecks) and Mount Disappointment which sound weird because they're relatively new and still in that first stage and are really literal. Also lots of endonyms have taken over the exonyms in the process of indigenous reconciliation.

    • @ChocolatePoltergiest
      @ChocolatePoltergiest 4 месяца назад

      We also have some fun ones like Tittybong and Mt Buggery in Victoria, and Tasmania's Stinkhole and Pisspot Creek.

  • @AsiniusNaso
    @AsiniusNaso 4 года назад +50

    8:54 Mallorca and Menorca. (Major and Minor)

  • @theskyisteal8346
    @theskyisteal8346 4 года назад +307

    "Generally, in post-colonial countries, the exonym sticks."
    Me: *laughs in Canada*

  • @TAP7a
    @TAP7a Год назад +2

    I like places called something like “X’s Folly”, because you *know* there was supposed to be a lesson that the original namers thought was worth remembering. You also know that said lesson is just not present in contemporary understanding and also that when you look it up it’s always something like “do not ask your army to cross the river away from actual fording points” or “do not just build a tower on any old ground without foundations”

  • @CitruKori
    @CitruKori Год назад +2

    I just practiced doing some of these and I have already figured out names for places that don’t even exist in my world yet. Truly great content

  • @ThrottleKitty
    @ThrottleKitty 4 года назад +80

    If World Anvil didn't threatened to dump everything I put on it into the "public" pool against my will if I miss a single payment, I might would consider using them. :(

    • @lifeontheledgerlines8394
      @lifeontheledgerlines8394 3 года назад +9

      That's why I use notebook.ai instead of World Anvil, I don't want all of my stuff public

    • @o00nemesis00o
      @o00nemesis00o 3 года назад +2

      Get 'local by flywheel' and make your own local wordpress encyclopaedia

    • @lesteryaytrippy7282
      @lesteryaytrippy7282 3 года назад +1

      @@lifeontheledgerlines8394 is notebook.ai free? Sounds interesting and I need a way to note down all my outlines and ideas

    • @lifeontheledgerlines8394
      @lifeontheledgerlines8394 3 года назад +3

      @@lesteryaytrippy7282 Yeah, the basic things are free, and they're basically all you need. The forums are also pretty cool. There's a premium version, but it's not really worth it imo. But yes, free

    • @kailaalyssavelasco6093
      @kailaalyssavelasco6093 3 года назад +4

      TiddlyWiki shill here to also recommend TiddlyWiki :D

  • @Alassandros
    @Alassandros 4 года назад +540

    As an American, I challenge the "coke" comment. We do call everything "soda" however.

    • @xthebumpx
      @xthebumpx 4 года назад +88

      As a Midwesterner, the correct term is "pop."

    • @lutilda
      @lutilda 4 года назад +56

      I think it's only common in Georgia, where coke was invented. I've never heard this usage of coke instead of soda or pop anywhere else in the country.

    • @johnterpack3940
      @johnterpack3940 4 года назад +46

      @@lutilda it's fairly common across the South, even here in Texas.

    • @slusheewolf2143
      @slusheewolf2143 4 года назад +30

      Midwesterners scorn at you when you say soda instead of pop. I am a born midwesterner and I call it soda because a kid in my high school class transferred from the South, and in the South, where my grandfather was from, pop means a punch to the face.

    • @handlebarfox2366
      @handlebarfox2366 4 года назад

      @@slusheewolf2143 and don't forget what a holler actually is

  • @boota2474
    @boota2474 11 месяцев назад +2

    Nonono, I will share the greatest secret to coming up with names for a fantasy setting:
    1) Use a crappy placeholder name until inspiration strikes.
    2) Become attached to the placeholder name.
    3) You're now attached to the placeholder...

  • @nichtanonym3393
    @nichtanonym3393 2 года назад

    I love how I was searching for your old video about naming places to name the languages of my DND world on world anvil and then I get a world anvil ad for you. They have the correct target ordinance.

  • @jonathanshaltz7750
    @jonathanshaltz7750 4 года назад +33

    "Europe" is a good example of a place name coming from history/mythology.

    • @Duiker36
      @Duiker36 4 года назад +6

      I had a suspicion that it wasn't that simple, since someone had to _make_ that choice. According to Wikipedia, apparently the first real use was a description of the Holy Roman Empire, in an attempt to mark it as the Western Roman Empire reborn. Previously, the earliest historians were simply using the term to mark part of Thrace, the shoreline west of the Aegean Sea, so it's not clear why Anaximander/Hecataeus suddenly decided it was an adequate term to describe everything west of the Phasis. But it's _modern_ usage appears to simply be, "That which Charlemagne was allowed to claim according to the Church."

  • @mgtogno
    @mgtogno 4 года назад +51

    wow, it took him whole 3 minutes before talking aout avatar...

  • @naomirey4380
    @naomirey4380 Год назад

    You are an excellent and natural teacher sir. I have seriously enjoyed this production.

  • @jessquinn6106
    @jessquinn6106 4 дня назад

    I have seen so many of these "place name" videos. This is the first one that was not only interesting to watch but made more sense.

  • @isakpalsson9012
    @isakpalsson9012 4 года назад +51

    In Sweden sometimes when two places have the same name they get named after the province. There is Kil of Värmland and Kil of Närke. And Fagerhult of Skåne and Fagerhult of Småland

    • @girv98
      @girv98 4 года назад +10

      A similar thing happens in the UK, just with rivers instead of regions. So for example, Newcastle-Upon-Tyne and Newcastle-under-Lyme

    • @LuulitaCD
      @LuulitaCD 4 года назад +4

      @@girv98 And in Germany: Frankfurt am Main and Frankfurt an der Oder.

    • @KatAnni
      @KatAnni 4 года назад

      Yeah, Germany does this too, we do it with Rivers. So there's Frankfurt (Main) and Frankfurt (Oder), but also Nienburg (Weser) and Nienburg (Saale). etc. You either write it and say it like 'Frankfurt Main' or 'Frankfurt am Main'.

    • @cosmicostrich3657
      @cosmicostrich3657 4 года назад +1

      That's also common in the US, you have Springfield, Massachusetts, Springfield, Missouri, Springfield Illinois, ect. And you have things like Quincy, Illinois and Quincy, Massachusetts

    • @LuulitaCD
      @LuulitaCD 4 года назад

      @@cosmicostrich3657 We do the same in Norway. A lot of old names based on natural features are repeated, and are usually referred to by the administrative area they're in, though this is not a part of the official name.

  • @adamforsstrand2048
    @adamforsstrand2048 4 года назад +135

    at 10:00 - 10:10 when you talk about Constantinople being changed by the Ottoman Empire to "Istanbul" in 1453, you are somewhat misleading: The Ottoman Empire after conquering Constantinople from the Byzantines, they didn't name it "Istanbul": they called it by a "ottoman turkish" name of Constantinople: "Ḳosṭanṭīnīye".
    It was only around the 1930's Ḳosṭanṭīnīye [by the muslim majority]/Constantinople [by the christian minority] changed the name to Istanbul after the loooong collapse of the Ottoman Empire.
    Just a short history about the place and city itself.

    • @HelloFutureMe
      @HelloFutureMe  4 года назад +25

      Yeah that was my bad research there. Slipped under my radar and added a correction.
      ~ Tim

    • @greekswaglord-dathistoryla201
      @greekswaglord-dathistoryla201 4 года назад +14

      Also, cool fact that i learned from my grandfather, Instanbul also comes from Greek believe it or not. Because Greeks used to say "ης την πόλιν" or "Is tin poli" meaning, into or entering the city. This stems from the fact that Greeks sometimes called Constantinople "The City", due to the mere fact that everybody knew that they were referring to Constantinople.

    • @josephujoostaa4462
      @josephujoostaa4462 4 года назад +1

      Yuh! Thats what i was thinking too.

    • @Shianky
      @Shianky 4 года назад +3

      @@greekswaglord-dathistoryla201 That's super interesting, thanks for sharing!

    • @braxtonfriday8713
      @braxtonfriday8713 4 года назад

      Thank you

  • @arparrabiosa
    @arparrabiosa Год назад

    I have stumbled upon your channel today. I just want you to know that I have found this particular video very inspiring and insightful. Liked and subscribed. Thank you.

  • @unseensounds
    @unseensounds 6 месяцев назад

    And just like that, you became my new favorite channel on RUclips

  • @TheBrickMasterB
    @TheBrickMasterB 4 года назад +29

    8:55 There was actually a VERY particularly funny case of this in late classical antiquity when Khosrau of Iran went to war with Justinian, and sacked numerous eastern cities. He had abducted the entire population of Antioch and was unable to ransom them back to the Byzantines, so he ended up building them an exact replica of Antioch in his borders, right down to the designs of each home and yard. The cherry on top of all of this, though, is that he named it "Weh Antiok Khosrow", or "Khosrau's Better Antioch".

    • @Antwriterdragon
      @Antwriterdragon 4 года назад

      Extra credit history I think did a video on this. Was awesome.

    • @phetproductions5818
      @phetproductions5818 4 года назад +2

      I remember that! It seems Khosrau also made the people bigger homes.

    • @gokbay3057
      @gokbay3057 4 года назад +6

      Khosrau: hey Justinian look at this city I have! It is the one you have, but better.

    • @Rainbowthewindsage
      @Rainbowthewindsage 4 года назад

      I remember that from Extra Credit. And was laughing my ass off, because it's such an awesomely petty thing between rulers.

  • @quyn3019
    @quyn3019 4 года назад +54

    After watching The Last Kingdom I was rather confused how "Eoforwic" evolved into "York". I now understand!

  • @fox7rain495
    @fox7rain495 7 месяцев назад

    Thank you so much. This video was super helpful and you made it so accessible.

  • @garethwatts2941
    @garethwatts2941 Год назад

    Dude! I watched this video years ago and just found it again! it's been a huge help as I've finally started doing lots of world building for my D&D campaign, funnily enough, I'm using world anvil! love your videos man!
    also, another 'river river' example, though not for a place, is the Australian NRL team Parramatta Eels. since Parramatta in the local indigenous tribes language means 'river of eels', they've effectively calling their team: The river of eels Eels.