Various names have been used for the island of Britain, see
Britain (name). The origin of place names of the countries within Britain are discussed below. Each country is divided into a number of counties.
England Most English place-names are either Anglo-Saxon or Old Norse in origin but Celtic names are to be found over the whole country, most notably in Cornwall (see below) and counties bordering Wales. Other place-names are hybrids of Celtic and Anglo-Saxon elements. There is a high level of personal names within the place names, presumably the names of local landowners at the time of naming. In the north and east, there are many place names of Norse origin; similarly, these contain many personal names. In general, the Anglo-Saxon and Norse place names tend to be rather mundane in origin, the most common types being [personal name + settlement/farm/place] or [type of farm + farm/settlement] (almost all towns ending in -wich, -ton, -ham, -by, -thorpe, -stoke/stock are of these types). In
Shropshire and
Herefordshire many Welsh place names are found in the borderlands such as
Pontrilas and
Trefonen. In
Cornwall most place-names are
Cornish in origin, whilst in
Cumbria there remain a number of place names in
Cumbric, the
Brythonic language of this region; examples including
Carlisle,
Helvellyn and
Blencathra. Most old Roman settlements, whether actually inhabited or not, were given the title of
-chester/caster in Anglo-Saxon (from the Latin
castrum, 'camp' or its plural form
castra); the specific names for each may only have little relation to the Roman names (e.g. Chester - 'Deva', Winchester - 'Venta Belgarum' etc.). Many English places derive part of their name from the river upon which they were built, but in the 16th century many English rivers were renamed with
back-formations from towns on their banks.
Cambridge, perhaps uniquely, illustrates both effects: originally
Grontabricc, a bridge on the Granta, the name became
Cantebruge and then
Cambrugge, from which the river was renamed
Cam. The scholars of Oxford renamed the upper course of the River Thames running through Oxford to Dorchester-on-Thames as the "Isis", owing to an incorrect assumption that the Latin name of the river, Tamesis, represented a combination of "Thame" (a river that joins the Thames at Dorchester) and "Isis". One place in
Yorkshire which retains
Celtic toponymy is
Pen-y-ghent (one of the
Yorkshire Three Peaks), whose name means Hill-by-the-Border in
Cumbric, a
Brittonic language.
Wales The vast majority of place names in Wales are Welsh by origin, containing elements such as Llan-, Aber-, Pen- etc. Along the south coast of Wales, where English has historically been more widely spoken, many place names are commonly
anglicized, such as
Pontypool, derived from
Pont-y-Pŵl. Many places throughout Wales have alternative names in English unrelated to the name in Welsh, for example,
Newport (where the Welsh name
Casnewydd means "New Castle") and
Swansea (derived from the Norse meaning "Svein's island") for the Welsh
Abertawe (Mouth of the
River Tawe. In some cases these are in fact related to their Welsh name, but disguised through linguistic processes of
consonant mutation, for example
Monmouth and the Welsh
Trefynwy both referring to the
River Monnow (Mon-
-fynwy). Welsh place names tend to be associated with natural features rather than people, hence elements describing rivers, hills and valleys are common. The exceptions are places with the prefix
Llan, meaning 'Church', which often contain the name of the Saint the church is dedicated to, e.g.
Llansantffraid - 'Church of St. Bridget'.
Scotland In the islands of Scotland, particularly
Orkney and
Shetland, but also the
Western Isles, there are many names of
Norse origin; this is also true on
Caithness and other coasts of the mainland. In the Highlands, the names are primarily in
Scottish Gaelic, with emphasis on natural features; elements such as Glen- (valley) and Inver- (confluence, mouth) are common. These have replaced
Pictish names that still occur on the east coast. In lowland Scotland, names are of more diverse origin. Many are Gaelic, but many are also from the
Brythonic branch of Celtic languages (such as
Ayr). There are also place names from
Old English and
Scots, such as
Edinburgh.
Isle of Man Most place-names are of Gaelic or Norse origin but there are traces of an earlier language in some names.
Channel Islands Most place names derive from Norman-French.
Ireland The vast majority of placenames in
Ireland are
anglicizations (adaptations to English
phonology) of
Irish language names. However, some names come directly from the
English language or
Scots language, and a handful come from
Old Norse. ==Place name origins in the United States==