A 150-Year Debate over Surnames vs. Patronymics in Iceland

IF 0.8 Q3 ETHNIC STUDIES
Genealogy Pub Date : 2023-11-14 DOI:10.3390/genealogy7040085
Kendra Willson
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Abstract

Iceland stands out in today’s Europe due to the fact that most Icelanders use patronymics rather than surnames. However, a small percentage of Icelanders do have surnames inherited in a fixed form. The first surnames were adopted in the 17th and 18th centuries. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, increasing numbers of Icelanders were taking up surnames, often Danicized or Latinized versions of Icelandic patronymics or place names. The practice became controversial with the rise of the independence movement, which was closely connected to linguistic purism. The use of surnames in Iceland has been debated since the 19th century. Whereas the other Nordic countries introduced legislation requiring citizens to have surnames, Iceland went in the opposite direction, forbidding new surnames starting in 1925. However, the surnames that were already in use were allowed to remain in circulation. This created an inequality which has haunted Icelandic name law discourse since. Having a surname in Iceland has often been linked with social prestige, and surnames have been perceived as a limited good. Since the 1990s, the fraction of Icelanders with surnames has increased through immigration and some liberalizations in the rules regarding the inheritance of existing Icelandic surnames. In the name of gender equity, surnames can be inherited along any line, not only patrilineal. Since 1996, immigrants seeking Icelandic citizenship are no longer required to change their names, and their children can inherit their surnames. The category of millinöfn (middle name), surname-like names that are not inflected for gender, was introduced in the 1996 law; some Icelanders with millinöfn use them as surnames in daily life even if they officially have patronymics. Despite the expansion in eligibility to take surnames, the basic principle that no new Icelandic surnames are allowed remains in the law and remains a point of contention. Many of the same themes—individual freedom vs. the preservation of cultural heritage, national vs. international orientation, gender equity—have recurred in the discourse over more than a century, reframed in the context of contemporary cultural values at any given time.
冰岛150年的姓氏与父名之争
冰岛在今天的欧洲脱颖而出,因为大多数冰岛人使用父名而不是姓氏。不过,也有一小部分冰岛人的姓氏是固定继承的。第一个姓氏是在17世纪和18世纪采用的。在19世纪末和20世纪初,越来越多的冰岛人开始取姓氏,通常是冰岛父名或地名的丹麦化或拉丁化版本。随着与语言纯粹主义密切相关的独立运动的兴起,这种做法引起了争议。自19世纪以来,冰岛人对姓氏的使用一直存在争议。当其他北欧国家立法要求公民有姓氏时,冰岛却反其道而行之,从1925年开始禁止使用新姓氏。然而,已经在使用的姓氏被允许继续流通。这造成了一种不平等,从那以后,这种不平等一直困扰着冰岛的姓名法讨论。在冰岛,拥有姓氏通常与社会威望联系在一起,姓氏被认为是一种有限的好处。自20世纪90年代以来,有姓氏的冰岛人的比例随着移民和一些关于继承现有冰岛姓氏的规则的自由化而增加。在性别平等的名义下,姓氏可以通过任何家族传承,而不仅仅是父系。自1996年以来,寻求冰岛公民身份的移民不再需要改名,他们的孩子可以继承他们的姓氏。1996年的法律引入了millinöfn(中间名)这一类别,即不因性别而变化的类似姓氏的名字;一些拥有millinöfn的冰岛人在日常生活中使用它们作为姓氏,即使他们正式拥有父名。尽管姓氏的资格有所扩大,但法律中不允许使用新冰岛姓氏的基本原则仍然存在,这仍然是一个争议点。一个多世纪以来,许多相同的主题——个人自由与文化遗产保护、国家取向与国际取向、性别平等——在讨论中反复出现,并在任何特定时间的当代文化价值背景下被重新定义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
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0.00%
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11 weeks
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