Имена у српским владарским породицама до почетка XIII века
Names in Serbian Ruling Families Until the Early XIII Century
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Разматра се најранији српски именослов VIII–XIII века, тј. раздобља које претходи и
приближно коинцидира са почецима старосрпске писмености под првим Немањићима. Тиме бива
оцртан типолошки оквир у којем се онда изнова преиспитују досад понуђене етимологије личног
имена Немања.
Our knowledge of Serbian onomasticon in the Early Middle Ages is limited to the names of rulers
and members of ruling houses, most of them recorded in Greek and Latin before the development
of Old Serbian literacy since the late 11th century. They are predominantly compounds of the inherited
Proto-Slavic type: Vyše-, Rodo‑, Čěje‑, Priby‑, Miro‑slavъ, Vladi‑, Vlasti‑, Hvali‑, Mǫti-, Stroji‑,
Straci‑, Tiho‑, Kloni-mirъ, Ćuđi-měrь (probably inspired by Gothic Thiudimer), Vyše-budъ, Prosi‑gojь).
Μonothematic names, based on adjectives (Bělъjь, ‑ojь ‘the white one’) or arisen through shortening
(Branъ from Brani‑mirъ / ‑slavъ, Des-a from Desi-slavъ), were less common. Christian names (Stephen,
Peter, Paul, Zachary) began to be used in the second half of the 9th century, but never prevailed;
instead, an onomastic formula consisting of both a Christian and a Slavic name (e.g. John Vladimir)
came into use during the 11th century. A special attention is paid to the much discussed origi...n of the
name Nemanja, borne by Stefan Nemanja († 1199), the progenitor of the Nemanjić dynasty. Within
the typological framework sketched in this paper, the attempts at interpreting it as an agglomeration
of hypocoristic elements seem anachronic, all the more so as the toponymy bears witness to its former
occurrence among the northern Slavs (Nemaňov, Nemanice in Bohemia, Nemanica in Belarus, Nemannestorph
in the Eastern Germany), which suggests a Common Slavic origin of the name. For the
same reason, it can hardly be considered the same as the Biblical name Naaman, although it is written
the same way by Greek and Latin authors (Νεεμᾶν, Neeman). Such a spelling may rather be explained
by an original form *Nejman(‑ja) related to SCr nȅmān f. ‘monster’, Russ. dial. néjman’ ‘an untameable
animal; an unrestrained person’, ultimately going back to the negative form of the verb *jьmati ‘to catch,
to have’. Underlying Ne(j)man(ja) might be the passive participle *ne‑jьmanь ‘not caught, uncatchable’
or a compound *Nejьma‑něgъ ‘deprived of care’, an apotropaic name for a child born in exile, as Stephen
Nemanja happened to be; for this type of short names cf. Borisъ from Bori‑slavъ and, with the same
second element, Domanъ from Doma‑něgъ, Pribynja from Priby‑něgъ. Under Nemanja’s descendants
his name together with Stefan ‘Stephen’ and Uroš (< Hung. úr ‘lord’) became a part of the royal titulary
an not unlike these two names was prohibited to be voluntarily given, which explains its later appearance
only in the border areas of medieval Serbia (Adriatic coast, Macedonia).
Keywords:
Срби; рани средњи век; лична имена; словенска; хришћанска; страна; Немања; владарска породица / Serbs; Early Middle Ages; Personal Names; Slovenian; Christian; Side; Nemanja; Government FamilySource:
Стефан Немања – Преподобни Симеон Мироточиви : Зборник радова I, 2016, 27-33Publisher:
- Београд : Институт за историју уметности
- Београд : Филозофски факултет
- Београд : Институт за српски језик САНУ
- Беране : Епархија будимљанско-никшићка, манастир Ђурђеви Ступови
- Цетиње : Митрополија црногорско-приморска, Цетињски манастир
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Институт за српски језик САНУ / Institute for the Serbian Language of SASATY - CHAP AU - Лома, Александар PY - 2016 UR - https://dais.sanu.ac.rs/123456789/12679 AB - Разматра се најранији српски именослов VIII–XIII века, тј. раздобља које претходи и приближно коинцидира са почецима старосрпске писмености под првим Немањићима. Тиме бива оцртан типолошки оквир у којем се онда изнова преиспитују досад понуђене етимологије личног имена Немања. AB - Our knowledge of Serbian onomasticon in the Early Middle Ages is limited to the names of rulers and members of ruling houses, most of them recorded in Greek and Latin before the development of Old Serbian literacy since the late 11th century. They are predominantly compounds of the inherited Proto-Slavic type: Vyše-, Rodo‑, Čěje‑, Priby‑, Miro‑slavъ, Vladi‑, Vlasti‑, Hvali‑, Mǫti-, Stroji‑, Straci‑, Tiho‑, Kloni-mirъ, Ćuđi-měrь (probably inspired by Gothic Thiudimer), Vyše-budъ, Prosi‑gojь). Μonothematic names, based on adjectives (Bělъjь, ‑ojь ‘the white one’) or arisen through shortening (Branъ from Brani‑mirъ / ‑slavъ, Des-a from Desi-slavъ), were less common. Christian names (Stephen, Peter, Paul, Zachary) began to be used in the second half of the 9th century, but never prevailed; instead, an onomastic formula consisting of both a Christian and a Slavic name (e.g. John Vladimir) came into use during the 11th century. A special attention is paid to the much discussed origin of the name Nemanja, borne by Stefan Nemanja († 1199), the progenitor of the Nemanjić dynasty. Within the typological framework sketched in this paper, the attempts at interpreting it as an agglomeration of hypocoristic elements seem anachronic, all the more so as the toponymy bears witness to its former occurrence among the northern Slavs (Nemaňov, Nemanice in Bohemia, Nemanica in Belarus, Nemannestorph in the Eastern Germany), which suggests a Common Slavic origin of the name. For the same reason, it can hardly be considered the same as the Biblical name Naaman, although it is written the same way by Greek and Latin authors (Νεεμᾶν, Neeman). Such a spelling may rather be explained by an original form *Nejman(‑ja) related to SCr nȅmān f. ‘monster’, Russ. dial. néjman’ ‘an untameable animal; an unrestrained person’, ultimately going back to the negative form of the verb *jьmati ‘to catch, to have’. Underlying Ne(j)man(ja) might be the passive participle *ne‑jьmanь ‘not caught, uncatchable’ or a compound *Nejьma‑něgъ ‘deprived of care’, an apotropaic name for a child born in exile, as Stephen Nemanja happened to be; for this type of short names cf. Borisъ from Bori‑slavъ and, with the same second element, Domanъ from Doma‑něgъ, Pribynja from Priby‑něgъ. Under Nemanja’s descendants his name together with Stefan ‘Stephen’ and Uroš (< Hung. úr ‘lord’) became a part of the royal titulary an not unlike these two names was prohibited to be voluntarily given, which explains its later appearance only in the border areas of medieval Serbia (Adriatic coast, Macedonia). PB - Београд : Институт за историју уметности PB - Београд : Филозофски факултет PB - Београд : Институт за српски језик САНУ PB - Беране : Епархија будимљанско-никшићка, манастир Ђурђеви Ступови PB - Цетиње : Митрополија црногорско-приморска, Цетињски манастир T2 - Стефан Немања – Преподобни Симеон Мироточиви : Зборник радова I T1 - Имена у српским владарским породицама до почетка XIII века T1 - Names in Serbian Ruling Families Until the Early XIII Century SP - 27 EP - 33 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_12679 ER -
@inbook{ author = "Лома, Александар", year = "2016", abstract = "Разматра се најранији српски именослов VIII–XIII века, тј. раздобља које претходи и приближно коинцидира са почецима старосрпске писмености под првим Немањићима. Тиме бива оцртан типолошки оквир у којем се онда изнова преиспитују досад понуђене етимологије личног имена Немања., Our knowledge of Serbian onomasticon in the Early Middle Ages is limited to the names of rulers and members of ruling houses, most of them recorded in Greek and Latin before the development of Old Serbian literacy since the late 11th century. They are predominantly compounds of the inherited Proto-Slavic type: Vyše-, Rodo‑, Čěje‑, Priby‑, Miro‑slavъ, Vladi‑, Vlasti‑, Hvali‑, Mǫti-, Stroji‑, Straci‑, Tiho‑, Kloni-mirъ, Ćuđi-měrь (probably inspired by Gothic Thiudimer), Vyše-budъ, Prosi‑gojь). Μonothematic names, based on adjectives (Bělъjь, ‑ojь ‘the white one’) or arisen through shortening (Branъ from Brani‑mirъ / ‑slavъ, Des-a from Desi-slavъ), were less common. Christian names (Stephen, Peter, Paul, Zachary) began to be used in the second half of the 9th century, but never prevailed; instead, an onomastic formula consisting of both a Christian and a Slavic name (e.g. John Vladimir) came into use during the 11th century. A special attention is paid to the much discussed origin of the name Nemanja, borne by Stefan Nemanja († 1199), the progenitor of the Nemanjić dynasty. Within the typological framework sketched in this paper, the attempts at interpreting it as an agglomeration of hypocoristic elements seem anachronic, all the more so as the toponymy bears witness to its former occurrence among the northern Slavs (Nemaňov, Nemanice in Bohemia, Nemanica in Belarus, Nemannestorph in the Eastern Germany), which suggests a Common Slavic origin of the name. For the same reason, it can hardly be considered the same as the Biblical name Naaman, although it is written the same way by Greek and Latin authors (Νεεμᾶν, Neeman). Such a spelling may rather be explained by an original form *Nejman(‑ja) related to SCr nȅmān f. ‘monster’, Russ. dial. néjman’ ‘an untameable animal; an unrestrained person’, ultimately going back to the negative form of the verb *jьmati ‘to catch, to have’. Underlying Ne(j)man(ja) might be the passive participle *ne‑jьmanь ‘not caught, uncatchable’ or a compound *Nejьma‑něgъ ‘deprived of care’, an apotropaic name for a child born in exile, as Stephen Nemanja happened to be; for this type of short names cf. Borisъ from Bori‑slavъ and, with the same second element, Domanъ from Doma‑něgъ, Pribynja from Priby‑něgъ. Under Nemanja’s descendants his name together with Stefan ‘Stephen’ and Uroš (< Hung. úr ‘lord’) became a part of the royal titulary an not unlike these two names was prohibited to be voluntarily given, which explains its later appearance only in the border areas of medieval Serbia (Adriatic coast, Macedonia).", publisher = "Београд : Институт за историју уметности, Београд : Филозофски факултет, Београд : Институт за српски језик САНУ, Беране : Епархија будимљанско-никшићка, манастир Ђурђеви Ступови, Цетиње : Митрополија црногорско-приморска, Цетињски манастир", journal = "Стефан Немања – Преподобни Симеон Мироточиви : Зборник радова I", booktitle = "Имена у српским владарским породицама до почетка XIII века, Names in Serbian Ruling Families Until the Early XIII Century", pages = "27-33", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_12679" }
Лома, А.. (2016). Имена у српским владарским породицама до почетка XIII века. in Стефан Немања – Преподобни Симеон Мироточиви : Зборник радова I Београд : Институт за историју уметности., 27-33. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_12679
Лома А. Имена у српским владарским породицама до почетка XIII века. in Стефан Немања – Преподобни Симеон Мироточиви : Зборник радова I. 2016;:27-33. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_12679 .
Лома, Александар, "Имена у српским владарским породицама до почетка XIII века" in Стефан Немања – Преподобни Симеон Мироточиви : Зборник радова I (2016):27-33, https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_12679 .