Latin_names_of_cities Latin_names_of_cities

Latin names of cities - Definition and Overview

Users of Neo-Latin have taken the Latin language to places the Romans never went; hence a need arose to make Latin names of cities that did not exist when Latin was a living language.

The first places that needed Latin names were encountered by Bible translators, who had a need to figure out what to call the many place names in the Bible in Latin. They either reworked the place names into Latin or Greek shapes; in one version, Jerusalem becomes Hierosolyma. Or, they adopted them directly, often treating the new place names as indeclinable nouns; here Jerusalem is brought over as Ierusalem.

Similar strategies are used with United States and North America and other place names that Latin writers needed to give Latin names to. A number of methods are used:

  • A classical ending such as -um or -a is added or substituted on the end of the source word. Hence Baltimorum for "Baltimore," Albania for "Albany."
  • The words already fit into Latin declensions, as do Indianapolis, Cincinnati, and Atlanta.
  • Calques are resorted to if the New World name is based on an Old World name; the various Parises in the United States are likely to become Lutetia, and Novum Eboracum or Neo-Eboracum represents New York, because Eboracum is the city of York in England.
  • The words are respelled to eliminate non-Latin sounds; hence Washington becomes Vasingtonium.
  • The words are adjusted to fit Latin declensions; Kansas appears as either Cansas, Cansatis or Cansa, Cansae; Chicago, Ohio, and Idaho become consonant stems, with genitives Chicagonis, Ohionis, Idahonis, &c.
  • The words are re-interpreted to fit Latin declensions; Illinois is treated as a third-declension noun.
  • The words are treated as indeclinable, like some Biblical names; Connecticut is sometimes treated this way.

In many cases, there is no consensus as to how to treat any given names, and variants exist. If a university or an episcopal see is in a town, the odds increase that there is a standard form hallowed by usage. Note that names of cities are usually feminine in gender in Latin, despite ending in -us. This rule is not always strictly observed in the New World

  • There are latin forms of Gold Coast, Sunshine Coast, and other Oceanian-South Pacific communities as well.
  • One example is London, Ontario which can be translateable to Londinium in Latin, while the rest of the other non-Latin languages like Greek and French for other Londons that are not London, England is spelt "London" (from English).

Here are the names that are listed in Latin and its modern meaning on the right for the world, except for Europe, Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, and Kurdistan.

  • This list includes Azerbaijan, Kurdistan southeast of Arbil, Abkhazia, Chechnya, Tatarstan, Dagestan, Malta and Pantelleria, and the whole of Kazakhstan, and Russia east of the ural mountains.
Latin NameEnglish Name, [other name(s)], [older name(s)], [province], [state]
Alexandria (Aegyptus)¹Alexandria (Al-Iskandriyah), Egypt
Alexandria (Colombia Bretannicum)Alexandria, British Columbia
Alexandria (Ontario)Alexandria, Ontario
Alexandria (Virginia)Alexandria, Virginia
AlgerisAlgiers, Algeria
Arbela, ArbilaErbil, Arbil
AscalonAshkelon, Israel
AtlantaAtlanta, Georgia
AugustaAugusta, Maine
Baltimorum, BaltimoriBaltimore, Maryland
Bona AeraBuenos Aires, Argentina
BostoniaBoston, Massachusetts
Cansae, CivitasKansas City
CarolinapolisCharlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada
CantabrigiaCambridge, Massachusetts, Cambridge, Ontario or Cambridge, England
CincinnatiCincinnati, Ohio
Civitas AlphabeticumAlphabet City (New York, New York)
Civita CaliforniaCalifornia City, California
Citiva? FloridaFlorida City, Florida
Civita OklahomaOklahoma City, Oklahoma
Citiva PanamaPanama City, Florida
ColumbusColumbus, North Carolina
Corpus ChristiCorpus Christi, Texas
Cultellus FlavusYellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada
DamascusDamascus (Dimashq), Syria
EdessaSanli Urfa
Equus AlbusWhitehorse, Yukon, Canada
Flumen JanuariiRio de Janeiro
FredericopolisFredericton, New Brunswick, Canada
Hippo RegiusBone, Algeria
Hierosolyma²Jerusalem
Indianapolis (4)Indianapolis, Indiana
Jericho²Jericho, West Bank (Palestine)
Leptis Magna, Lepcis Magnanear Tripoli, Libya
Londinium, Africa AustraliaLondon, South Africa
Londinium (Ontario)London, Ontario
LudovicopolisLouisville, Kentucky
Marathon (Ontario)Marathon, Ontario
MedabaMecca (Makkah), Saudi Arabia
Medina, ArabiaMedina, Saudi Arabia
Medina, Nova EburacaMedina, New York
Melburnium, Victoria (Regna)Melbourne, Australia
Mons Regius, Marianopolis, Villa MariaMontreal, Quebec
Minneapolis (4)Minneapolis, Minnesota
Nova Aurelia, Novum AureliumNew Orleans, Louisiana
Nova HelvetiaNueva Suecia (New Switzerland), Uruguay
Novum BaltimorumNew Baltimore, Michigan
Novis? HamburgensisNew Hamburg, Ontario
Novum EboracumNew York, New York
Nowum GlasgoviumNew Glasgow, Nova Scotia, Canada
Novum Londinium*New London, Connecticut
Olympia (Vasingtonia)Olympia, Washington
OxoniaOxford, England
Philadelphia¹ (America)Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
PhiladelphiaAmman, Jordan
Phoenix¹, ArizonaPhoenix, Arizona
Praetoria?Pretoria, South Africa
Providenia?Provideniya, Russia, west of Alaska
ProvidentiaProvidence, Rhode Island
Urbs QuebecisQuebec City, Quebec
Urbs ReginaeRegina, Saskatchewan, Canada
RegiopolisKingston, Jamaica
Regiopolis, ONKingston, Ontario
Sancti SpiritiSancti Spiriti, Argentina
Sanctus JohannesSaint John, New Brunswick, Canada
Sanctus Johannes Terrae NovaeSt. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada
San PaulusSão Paulo, Brazil
SarniaSarnia, Ontario
SicagumChicago, Illinois
Sinus TonitralisThunder Bay, Ontario
Tempe (Arizona)Tempe, Arizona
TiberiasTiberias (Teverya), Israel
TingisTangier, Morocco
Tripoli¹Tripoli, Libya
TunisTunis, Tunisia
VasingtoniumWashington, DC
Victoria (Regna), Colombia BritannicaVictoria, British Columbia
  • or Novo Londinio
  • 1 - Latinized form of the Greek-derived name.
  • 2 - Latinized form of a Hebrew derived name
  • 3 - Latinized form of an Amerindian languages-derived name.
  • 4 - only polis is a Greek derived name.

Example Usage of cities

vbeespocket: @TheDannyNoriega YEAH! Magic Carpet would b so funners!!! U cn travel all over da cities n skip the uggie parts of it! Teehee!!! =0)
DurhamTalk: @kathrynkosak Already up and running @foursquare cities #Charlotte, #Raliegh, #Durham >>> NEXT: #Wilmi.. http://bit.ly/4AMymP
alaskawarrior: Sarah Palin was in Tri-cities for a book signing at Hastings Records Store today
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