Bruken av navneparene kvener - Kvenland og finner - Finland i tekster fra middelalderen. En kildekritisk gjennomgang

The article deals with the name pairs Kven and Finn(e) and Kvenland - Finland in medieval texts, on one hand in Old Norse and the other hand in Old Swedish. Scholars have traditionally thought that the ethnonym kven referred specifically to an ancient Finnish people living on both sides of the Gulf...

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Main Author: Söderholm, Eira
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Norwegian
Published: Norsk namnelag 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ojs.novus.no/index.php/NON/article/view/2026
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spelling ftnovusforlagojs:oai:ojs.pkp.sfu.ca:article/2026 2023-05-15T18:14:47+02:00 Bruken av navneparene kvener - Kvenland og finner - Finland i tekster fra middelalderen. En kildekritisk gjennomgang Bruken av navneparene "kvener - Kvenland" og "finner - Finland" i tekster fra middelalderen. En kildekritisk gjennomgang Söderholm, Eira 2022-01-14 application/pdf http://ojs.novus.no/index.php/NON/article/view/2026 nor nor Norsk namnelag http://ojs.novus.no/index.php/NON/article/view/2026/1995 http://ojs.novus.no/index.php/NON/article/view/2026 Opphavsrett 2021 Eira Söderholm https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ CC-BY-SA NAMN OG NEMNE; Vol. 38 (2021) NAMN OG NEMNE; Vol 38 (2021) 2703-7371 0800-4684 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Fagfellevurdert artikkel 2022 ftnovusforlagojs 2022-04-29T11:27:03Z The article deals with the name pairs Kven and Finn(e) and Kvenland - Finland in medieval texts, on one hand in Old Norse and the other hand in Old Swedish. Scholars have traditionally thought that the ethnonym kven referred specifically to an ancient Finnish people living on both sides of the Gulf of Bothnia, and the regional name Kvenland would have meant the area inhabited by this northern people. The ethnonym Finn(e), on the other hand, would have referred in Swedish as well as Old Norse to the people who lived in southwestern Finland; in Norwegian also to the Sámi people. The region name Finland would have meant the southwestern Finland in both languages. In this article I try to argue that this is not the case. My argument is that, the Swedes originally used the word Finne of all Finnish-speaking tribes living north of the Gulf of Finland, and the region name Finland would have referred to the entire area where they lived. Old Norse-speakers, on the other hand, used the ethnonym Kven of the same tribes that the Swedes called Finne, and the regionname Kvenland was not limited to refering to the coast of the Gulf of Bothnia. Thus, the ethnonyms Finn(e) and Kven and the region names Kvenland and Finland would have been synonyms used by two different groups of language users. The article deals with the name pairs Kven and Finn(e) and Kvenland - Finland in medieval texts, on one hand in Old Norse and the other hand in Old Swedish. Scholars have traditionally thought that the ethnonym kven referred specifically to an ancient Finnish people living on both sides of the Gulf of Bothnia, and the regional name Kvenland would have meant the area inhabited by this northern people. The ethnonym Finn(e), on the other hand, would have referred in Swedish as well as Old Norse to the people who lived in southwestern Finland; in Norwegian also to the Sámi people. The region name Finland would have meant the southwestern Finland in both languages. In this article I try to argue that this is not the case. My argument is that, the Swedes originally used the word Finne of all Finnish-speaking tribes living north of the Gulf of Finland, and the region name Finland would have referred to the entire area where they lived. Old Norse-speakers, on the other hand, used the ethnonym Kven of the same tribes that the Swedes called Finne, and the regionname Kvenland was not limited to refering to the coast of the Gulf of Bothnia. Thus, the ethnonyms Finn(e) and Kven and the region names Kvenland and Finland would have been synonyms used by two different groups of language users. Article in Journal/Newspaper Sámi Sámi Novus - Online tidsskrifter (Novus forlag) Finn ENVELOPE(12.739,12.739,65.935,65.935)
institution Open Polar
collection Novus - Online tidsskrifter (Novus forlag)
op_collection_id ftnovusforlagojs
language Norwegian
description The article deals with the name pairs Kven and Finn(e) and Kvenland - Finland in medieval texts, on one hand in Old Norse and the other hand in Old Swedish. Scholars have traditionally thought that the ethnonym kven referred specifically to an ancient Finnish people living on both sides of the Gulf of Bothnia, and the regional name Kvenland would have meant the area inhabited by this northern people. The ethnonym Finn(e), on the other hand, would have referred in Swedish as well as Old Norse to the people who lived in southwestern Finland; in Norwegian also to the Sámi people. The region name Finland would have meant the southwestern Finland in both languages. In this article I try to argue that this is not the case. My argument is that, the Swedes originally used the word Finne of all Finnish-speaking tribes living north of the Gulf of Finland, and the region name Finland would have referred to the entire area where they lived. Old Norse-speakers, on the other hand, used the ethnonym Kven of the same tribes that the Swedes called Finne, and the regionname Kvenland was not limited to refering to the coast of the Gulf of Bothnia. Thus, the ethnonyms Finn(e) and Kven and the region names Kvenland and Finland would have been synonyms used by two different groups of language users. The article deals with the name pairs Kven and Finn(e) and Kvenland - Finland in medieval texts, on one hand in Old Norse and the other hand in Old Swedish. Scholars have traditionally thought that the ethnonym kven referred specifically to an ancient Finnish people living on both sides of the Gulf of Bothnia, and the regional name Kvenland would have meant the area inhabited by this northern people. The ethnonym Finn(e), on the other hand, would have referred in Swedish as well as Old Norse to the people who lived in southwestern Finland; in Norwegian also to the Sámi people. The region name Finland would have meant the southwestern Finland in both languages. In this article I try to argue that this is not the case. My argument is that, the Swedes originally used the word Finne of all Finnish-speaking tribes living north of the Gulf of Finland, and the region name Finland would have referred to the entire area where they lived. Old Norse-speakers, on the other hand, used the ethnonym Kven of the same tribes that the Swedes called Finne, and the regionname Kvenland was not limited to refering to the coast of the Gulf of Bothnia. Thus, the ethnonyms Finn(e) and Kven and the region names Kvenland and Finland would have been synonyms used by two different groups of language users.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Söderholm, Eira
spellingShingle Söderholm, Eira
Bruken av navneparene kvener - Kvenland og finner - Finland i tekster fra middelalderen. En kildekritisk gjennomgang
author_facet Söderholm, Eira
author_sort Söderholm, Eira
title Bruken av navneparene kvener - Kvenland og finner - Finland i tekster fra middelalderen. En kildekritisk gjennomgang
title_short Bruken av navneparene kvener - Kvenland og finner - Finland i tekster fra middelalderen. En kildekritisk gjennomgang
title_full Bruken av navneparene kvener - Kvenland og finner - Finland i tekster fra middelalderen. En kildekritisk gjennomgang
title_fullStr Bruken av navneparene kvener - Kvenland og finner - Finland i tekster fra middelalderen. En kildekritisk gjennomgang
title_full_unstemmed Bruken av navneparene kvener - Kvenland og finner - Finland i tekster fra middelalderen. En kildekritisk gjennomgang
title_sort bruken av navneparene kvener -â kvenland og finner - finland i tekster fra middelalderen. enâ kildekritisk gjennomgang
publisher Norsk namnelag
publishDate 2022
url http://ojs.novus.no/index.php/NON/article/view/2026
long_lat ENVELOPE(12.739,12.739,65.935,65.935)
geographic Finn
geographic_facet Finn
genre Sámi
Sámi
genre_facet Sámi
Sámi
op_source NAMN OG NEMNE; Vol. 38 (2021)
NAMN OG NEMNE; Vol 38 (2021)
2703-7371
0800-4684
op_relation http://ojs.novus.no/index.php/NON/article/view/2026/1995
http://ojs.novus.no/index.php/NON/article/view/2026
op_rights Opphavsrett 2021 Eira Söderholm
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-SA
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