Names used by Ottoman women, many of whom were harem members.Ģ936 lists a few more names of harem women (concubines and This report from the Academy of S Gabriel discusses the names of harem slaves: Personal Names in Warres Betweene the Turkes and theĪ short list of names taken from a 16th century English Ottoman Cauldron-Makers, 1643-1644, by Ursula GeorgesĪnalyzes the names of eighteen men in an Istanbul cauldron-makers' guild. Lists of masculine and feminine names from court records from Sixteenth-Century Turkish Names, by Ursula Georges Muslim Names from 1455 Istanbul, Ursula GeorgesĪ number of masculine names, and a few feminine names, from recently conquered Istanbul. Thisīrief discussion explains some of the details. The term Turkish refers to several groups that usedĭifferent dialects of Turkish and different sorts of names. Pre-1600 Arabic names from the Encyclopedia of Islam.Īcademy of Saint Gabriel Report 3178 Lists masculine (and a few feminine) names from West Africa found in Arabic contexts. Names Collected from the Encyclopaedia of Islam, by Basil Dragonstrike Moorish Place-names in Portugal, by Dom Pedro de AlcazarĪrabic names of administrative districts in Portugal. Names of Jewish women from records written in Arabic (and a few in Turkish). Ottoman Court Records (16th C Jerusalem), by Mari Elspeth nic Bryan This article contains some examples of Islamic names. Proceedings of the SCA's 1989 Known World Heraldic Symposium Of laqabs, devotional epithets used by Muslim men in addition Names of God, by Mustapha al-Muhaddith ibn al-SaqaatĪ list of the attributes of Allah, which were used in the construction Names found in the First Volume of The Travels of Ibn Baṭṭūṭa, by Basil Dragonstrike Names Found in The Travels of Ibn Jubayr, by Basil Dragonstrike Names from 12th century northern Syria, Mesopotamia, and Egypt. Names Found in An Arab-Syrian Gentleman and Warrior in the Period of the Crusades: Memoirs of Usāmah Ibn-Munqidh, as translated by Philip K. Names from the Diary of Ibn al-Bannā', by Basil Dragonstrike Names from inscriptions written in Arabic and found in Iran, from the tenth through fourteenth centuries. Medieval Names from Inscriptions at Siraf, Iran, Ursula Georges Names from inscriptions written in Arabic and found in greater Persia, dating from the ninth to the early twelfth century. Personal Names in Monumental Inscriptions From Persia and Transoxiana, by Ursula Georges Includes a lengthy list of Mamluk given names. We have a couple of Academy reports that give good guidance onĭiscusses the general form of Mamluk names. Multi-piece Nasabs, by Basil Dragonstrike Some analysis of the appearances of locatives in multi-generational Arabic patronymics.Īrabic for Onomasts: Some Notes, by Basil DragonstrikeĬurious Names Project, by Basil Dragonstrike A collection of articles on the Arabic spelling, etymology, and other features of specific medieval names. Kunyas for the Childless, by Basil DragonstrikeĪ few examples of bynames used by childless people which appear to describe them as parents.Īrabic Name Formation Patterns from Various Sources, by Basil DragonstrikeĮxamples of name structures used in some medieval Arabic chronicles. Women's Names in Arabic Bynames, by Juliana de LunaĮxamples of Arabic bynames which describe people as children of their mothers or parents of their daughters.Īl-Maʻrūf Bi- "Known As" in Arabic Names, by Basil Dragonstrikeĭescribes an Arabic grammatical construction for people known by multiple names.ĭouble Locative Bynames in Arabic, by Basil Dragonstrike Analyzes examples of people known by multiple bynames describing where they were from. Re-document them for the new version and took the safe route of There are a few names in thatĪrticle which are not in the new one Da'ud was unable to Updated and extended version of the author's earlier Also includes a table of Arabic translations of Of masculine and feminine given names and bynames taken from Period Arabic Names and Naming Practices, by Da'ud ibn Auda.Ī discussion of Arabic naming customs in our period, with lists Known World Heraldic Symposium Proceedings. Originally published in the proceedings of the SCA's 1989 Of the general structure of medieval Arabic names.įutuwwah, by Mustapha al-Muhaddith ibn al-SaqaatĪ list of men's given names and surnames from an early 11th century This is a revised and greatly expanded version of Juliana's articleĬontaining lists of masculine and feminine given names and bynames from 8th toġ2th century Andalusia records. Medieval Naming Guides: Arabic and Islamic Islamic Names, including Arabic, Turkish, and PersianĪrabic Names from al-Andalus, by Juliana de Luna
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