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Scandinavia (etymology)


The etymology for the names Scandinavia, Scania and the town of Skanör is considered to be the same.

The name is most probably derived from the Germanic *Skathin- meaning "danger" (cf. English scathing and unscathed) and *awjo meaning "island". It may have referred to the dangerous banks around Skanör and Falsterbo in Scania in southernmost Scandinavia.

Alternatively, the first element is sometimes attributed to the Norse goddess of winter, Skadi.

-ör in Skanör is the same as -ore in Elsinore. In modern Danish and Scanian it is a somewhat archaic word for sand bank.

In Beowulf we meet the form Scedenigge. The form Scadinavia appears in Roman texts, and in Jordanes' history of the Goths (AD 551) we meet the form Scandza their original home, separated by sea from the land of Europe (chapter 1, 4).

The name of the Scandinavian mountain range, Skanderna in Swedish, is artificially derived from Skandinavien in the 19th century, in analogy with Alperna for the Alps. The commonly used names are Kölen "the Keel" or fjällen "the fells, the mountains".

Gangavia is another form used by old sources, e.g. Paulus Diaconus' Historia Langobardorum , too.

Last updated: 05-07-2005 06:41:38
10-26-2009 08:16:03
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