ABSTRACT

Names are never given accidentally; they are chosen and bestowed according to rules that reflect fundamental features of the society and culture concerned. This is a study of the nature and history of naming practices in Western Europe.

part |2 pages

PART I Ancient Rome

chapter 1|1 pages

The name system: individual and family

chapter |16 pages

The tria nomina

chapter 2|17 pages

Name and status

chapter 3|10 pages

Roman expansion

chapter 4|4 pages

Late Roman names

chapter |12 pages

Status, ancestry and polyonomy

part |2 pages

PART II The Middle Ages

chapter 5|21 pages

Germanic names

chapter 6|29 pages

Christian names

chapter 7|35 pages

Second names: I

chapter 8|33 pages

Second names: II

part |2 pages

PART III Modern times

chapter 9|30 pages

First names 1500–1900: I

chapter 10|19 pages

First names 1500–1900: II

chapter |8 pages

Usage

chapter 11|21 pages

Family names, titles and nicknames

chapter |17 pages

Titles

chapter |10 pages

Nicknames

chapter 12|26 pages

America

chapter 13|20 pages

Europe in the twentieth century 316 324

chapter |3 pages

Conclusion

chapter |14 pages

Notes

chapter |1 pages

Glossary

chapter |17 pages

Bibliography

chapter |12 pages

(b) Secondary