Russian development and toponymy of the Pelym region according to written and field sources of the 18th-21stcenturies

The paper is aimed at the study of the under-investigated Russian toponymy of the north of the Sverdlovsk Region, specifically, of the oikonyms - the names of villages - along the lower reaches of the Pelym River. The basin of the Pelym River, a tributary of the Tavda River, is of interest as the Ma...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:VESTNIK ARHEOLOGII, ANTROPOLOGII I ETNOGRAFII
Main Author: Dmitrieva, T. N.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Russian
Published: Tyumen Scientific Centre of Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences 2021
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Online Access:http://elar.urfu.ru/handle/10995/102835
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85108417745&doi=10.20874%2f2071-0437-2021-53-2-15&partnerID=40&md5=1d93eec048e1886c369ced275974fe7e
https://doi.org/10.20874/2071-0437-2021-53-2-15
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Summary:The paper is aimed at the study of the under-investigated Russian toponymy of the north of the Sverdlovsk Region, specifically, of the oikonyms - the names of villages - along the lower reaches of the Pelym River. The basin of the Pelym River, a tributary of the Tavda River, is of interest as the Mansi native territory. It is also an area of the early land development by the Russians beyond the Urals, which began at the end of the 16thcentury. The objective of this study is to establish the origins of the earliest layer of names of the Russian villages along the Pelym River and to trace the history of their functioning from the 18thcentury to the present day. The work is based on the material of historical documents (customs books of the town of Pelym of the second half of the 17thcentury), information from written, statistical, and cartographic sources (travel materials of academician G.F. Müller of 1742, expeditions of B. Munkácsi in 1888-1889, lists of the settlements of the Ural and Sverdlovsk regions, and modern maps of the region), as well as field materials of the 1960s collected by the Ural University Toponymic Expedition. Research methods include descriptive, etymological, comparative, reconstruction, and statistical analysis of linguistic material. It has been ascertained that almost all considered oikonyms have anthroponomical origins and are derived from the surnames of first settlers. They reflect the history of the development of the Pelym region, including its active settlement by the Russian riflemen Streltsy (villages Krivonogova, Khudyakova, Kuznetsova, Tolmacheva etc.). The names of the Russian villages which were founded in the Mansi native territory were subjected to adaptation in the Mansi language, or the Mansi were giving them their own names, which is clearly shown by the materials of B. Munkácsi of the late 19thcentury (Ponomareva village → Panamarovskaya in Russian and Varauleχ-pewel in Mansi, Kadaulova (Kaidaulova) village → Kheitel-p. in Mansi etc.). Of the 17 Russian oikonyms of the ...