Glossary of pre-Christian Lithuanian names

A number of Lithuanian surnames evolved from the ancient pre-Christian Lithuanian personal names, such as Budrys, Girdenis, Tylenis, Vilkas, Amantas, Bukantas, Rimgaila, Vizgirda, Tarvydas.[1] Many of them are of compound type, typically consisting of two stems (dithematic names), and many are of single stem.[2][3][4] Sometimes the order of these stems may reverse, e.g., Norvaišas vs. Vaišnoras, Tautvydas vs. Vytautas.

Some two-stemmed names have a clear etymology, arising from nicknames, such as Baltakis = Balt-akys = "White eyes". Alfred Senn suggects that such transparent names are less ancient development, while those with non-evident etymology originate from the Indo-European pra-language.[5]

A two-stemmed name may be further compounded into a patronymic cognomen/surname: Algirdas—Algirdaitis (son of Algirdas; see Lithuanian names of Vladimir Olgerdovich, Andrei of Polotsk, Dmitry of Bryansk), ŽygimantasŽygimantaitis.[2]

Glossary of stems in dithematic names

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Much of this glossary of stems common in ancient Lithuanian names is based on Dictionary of Lithuanian Surnames, searchable online in the Lithuanian Surname Database (LSD).[6]

References

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  1. ^ Juozas Kudirka , The Lithuanians: An Ethnic Portrait, section Lithuanian surnames (translation of the book: Juozas Kudirka, Lietuviai: etniniai bruožai, 1991)
  2. ^ a b K. A. GIRVILAS, PRE-CHRISTIAN NAME GIVING IN LITHUANIA, Lituanus,Volume 24, No.3 - Fall 1978
  3. ^ a b c Antanas Pakerys, Dvikamienių lietuvių vyrų vardų kirčiavimas: pirmųjų dėmenų tvirtapradė priegaidė [ACCENTUATION OF LITHUANIAN COMPOUND MALE NAMES: THE ACUTE OF THE FIRST COMPONENT], doi:10.15388/baltistica.44.2.1312 (somewhat different version)
  4. ^ Antanas Pakerys, Dvikamienių lietuvių moterų vardų kirčiavimas [Dvikamienių lietuvių moterų vardų kirčiavimas]
  5. ^ Alfred Senn, Lithuanian Surnames, JSTOR 2491865
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i Surname database; entries based on Lietuvių pavardžių žodynas, (ats. red. A. Vanagas, autoriai A. Vanagas, V. Maciejauskienė, M. Razmukaitė). Vilnius: Mokslas, 1985, T. 1; 1989, T. 2.
  7. ^ KĘSMINAS

Further reading

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