The derivation of the name
Tauern has been variously ascribed: • One view is that the name
Tauern is an old
substrate word (
*taur- for 'mountain‚
mountain pass, crossing'), which passed directly (less probable) or via the
Slavic language (more likely) into
German. (The name
Tauern is probably pre-Slavic, but there is also a common Slavic word,
tur- 'swelling, ridge, elongated hillock', etc.). • Another postulation is that the
Tauern is the only mountain range that has kept its pre-Slavic name in Carinthia as it passed down the generations. It is derived from the Indo-Germanic
*(s)teur- for 'bull; great hill'. The Tauern are so-to-speak the "bulls", the old
Taurisci of Upper Carinthia, the mountain dwellers, with the old Upper Carinthian town of
Teurnia being the corresponding mountain town. If the name
Tauern is pre-Slavic, it could possibly be
Celtic, and thus presumably linked to the Taurisci, or it could be
Illyrian, a collective term possibly for the pre- and early Celtic population in the Alpine region. There is no clear link with the name of the municipality of
Thaur near Innsbruck, which could be analogous to the Illyrian for 'rock', but could also be derived from the
Rhaeto-Romance word
Tgaura 'goat'. == Ranges ==