Pauly's Realencyclopädie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft
Letter A
Findings in December 2025
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I have looked through Türkish window at the names that I have read in the Pauly's Realencyclopädie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft
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Uzunbacak Adem
Pauly Word | Info | Türkic Word | Info | Extra Info |
Achaius | Border-river bw. | akığ | current, flow | |
Achamas | river on Crete | ak-: | to flow | |
Achanoi | a people in Scythia | akın | flood; sudden attacking soldiers; war | |
Achardeos | River in Sarmatia | akar | river | |
Acharnai | Attic people | akar | river | |
Achelites/Achelis | river in Smyrna | ak-: | to flow | |
Acheloos | the element of flowing water in general, various rivers | akığlığ | flowing, current, fluid | |
Acheron | Name of Greek rivers, like Acheloos (above) | akar | river | |
Achindanas | river on the Carmanian coast, today Gin-âô | akın | flood | |
Achlada | Pasture district ('pear trees') in the area of Alopekai near Miletos in Ionia | kertme | wild pear | related to acherdos (wild pear) |
Acidava (2x) | a town (on a river) | ak-: to flow | oba: dwelling place | -d-: a consonant between 2 vocals |
Acionna | Gallic deity (spring goddess?) | ak-: to flow | ana: mother | |
Adanou Dio/Ἀδάνου δύο | two islands in the Arabian Gulf (Ptol. VI 7, 44), probably identical with the Djebel el-Suqûr Geierberg and the Harnischinsel, whereas the insula Adanu (Var. Sadanum, Plin. VI 175), which is mentioned next to Malichu (as in Ptol.), must be put together with Perim near Aden | ada | island | -n: Plural suffix |
Adapera | City in Galatia, west of Tavium, identical with Lassora | ada: island | ara: a place between | -p- consonant between 2 vocals |
Adris | tributary of the Akesines in the Indian Panǧâb | adır- | to seperate | |
Aduros | old name of the river Kaikos in Mysia | adır- | to seperate | |
Aeadava | Castle in Mediterranean Dacia | aya: palm of hand | oba: dwelling place | -d-: a consonant between 2 vocals |
Aedico (Edekon) | Father of Odoacer (who destroyed Roman Emprire) | ?ayat-: to be respected | >ayatık: respected | wiki: Omeljan Pritsak derived it from Old Turkic verbal root *edär- (to pursue, to follow), and deverbal noun suffix κων (kun < r-k < r-g < *gun).[2] The reconstructed form is *edäkün (< *edär-kün; "follower, retainer“). His father’S name Odoacer could be derived from Türkish, too. |
Aella | the fastest Amazon | yel | wind | |
Aello | Harpy, 'Stormwind' daughter of Thaumas and the Oceanid Elektra | yel | wind | |
Aelmanius | a god? on an inscription found near Madrid | Yelme: It means a vanguard unit, a reconnaissance unit. Proto-Turkish *yēl- Riding a horse, galloping on a horse. | The second is yalman (yelmen), which means the cutting part of the sword. (<Yal-: to shine?) | There is also the Kipchak word 'yalman', which means 'groundhog' and whose old form is 'yamlan'. |
Agakles | He is only mentioned in Homer's Iliad as the father of the Trojan warrior Epeigeus. | aga/aqa | father | |
Agalma | jewelry, votive gift, sacred work of art | kalın, kalıng | dowry, presents for the bride | *kalım: random for tne bride |
Agaroi | a Scythian or Sarmatian people on the west side of the Maeotis in the region of Ἀγαρία, who had the reputation of using snake venom as a remedy for wounds. App. b. Mithr. 88. | ağu/ağa | poison | |
Agoritai | People on the northern slope of the Caucasus, near the river Vardanes (Qubân) | ağır: heavy | tai: mountain | Like Ağrı Dağı |
Agyris | Cypriot city king, executed by Euagoras in 391 BC | ağır | worthy, heavy | could be an adjective pr a name of a person |
Aias | name of many characters | ayaz | a slave with a bright/white face | DLT |
Aidepsos | City on Euboea, famous for its warm sulphur springs, dedicated to Heracles | ay: moon | su: water | |
Aidos | Personification of modesty with cult on the Acropolis in Athens | uyat | testicle | uyat-: to be ashamed |
Aigobares | noble Persian in the cavalry of Alexander the Great | ay: moon | kobar-: to raise | Persian? The name is very Türkish > Ayyücelten?he who raises the moon |
Aikalos | epithet of Zeus. | ay: moon | kal: old man | |
Aiolos | Windgod | ay: moon (clear sky, frost) | ool: son | |
Aisaros | river near Kroton in Bruttia, now Esaro | ay: moon | sarı: yellow, white | |
Atole; Aitolia; Aitolos | Epiklesis of Artemis in Naupaktos and among the Veneti; Landscape in western Greece; Eponymus of the Aetolians | ay: moon | tolı/tolu: full | aytolu/aytolı: full moon (a criteria in Türkic word to define a beautiful face). |
Aitondas | Boiotarch (Avery high officer in Boiotia) ca. 175 v. Chr. in thebanischen Inschriften. | ay: moon | ton-: to freeze | ton: clothes |
Aitymandroi | people in Aria on the lower reaches of the Etymander (Afghanistan) | ay: moon | tuman: fog, smog, fog, mist | |
Aiza | A Pisidian location | ayaz | clear sky; frost | frosty |
Akalissos | a town (on a river) Limyros | ak-: to flow | su: water | akalı: sth like, that that has sth to flow, or that that can flow |
Akarassos | a town (on a river) | akarsu | river (lit. flowing water) | akarassos ist almost the same word like akarsu. |
Akas | a king | aka | elder brother; elder uncle; father; grandfather 2 respectful address 3 elder | |
Akes | legendary river in Chorâsân, closed from the high mountains with locks | ak-: to flow | >akığ: flowing water, current, act of flowing | |
Akesines | name of 2 rivers | ak-: to flow | ||
Akesinos | name of a river in Scythia | ak-: to flow | ||
Akessaia | allegedly older name of Ecbatana | ak-: to flow | say:1 area covered with stones, stony desert, stony riverbed 2 shallow place, shallow | |
Akidalia | Spring near Orchomenos in Boeotia, where Aphrodite bathed with the Charite | ak-: to flow | dal: 1 branch 2 tree 3 willow | |
Akidas | tributary of the Anigros in Triphylia | akığ | >akığ: flowing water, current, act of flowing | |
Akikaros | Babylonian wisaman | ak: white | kar-: to get older, older man > karı: a person to respect, wiseman | |
Akimis | Cretan river or field name in the area of Latos | ak-: to flow | >akığ: flowing water, current, act of flowing | |
Akinakes | a short sword | ak-: to flow | akın: to raid ,to attack | |
Akinakai | Volk im südlichsten, an Aria grenzenden Teile von Baktriana | akın: to raid ,to attack | aka: elder brother; elder uncle; father; grandfather 2 respectful address 3 elder | |
Akinasis | River on the Colchian coast north of Akampsis | akın | flood | |
Akiris | River in Lucania, flowing a little north of Heraclea, now Agri | ak-: to flow | >akığ: flowing water, current, act of flowing | |
Akis | river of Sicily, originating at the foot of Mount Etna | ak-: to flow | ||
Akithios | small river on the west coast of Sicily near Lilybaeum | ak-: to flow | ||
Akoraba | Place and landscape in Coelesyria on the Apamea – Palmyra road | oba: dwelling place | ||
Akrasos | city in Lydia on the upper reaches of the Caicos | ak-: to flow | su: water | |
Akritas 1 | southernmost mountain range of Messinia between the cities of Methone and Asine | taw/tau | mountain | |
Akritas 2 | foothills of Bithynia, on the Propontis southeast of Chalcedon | taw/tau | mountain | |
Akrolissos | Acropolis of the Illyrian city of Lissos, now Lêš, Italian: Alessio | su | water | |
Akron | Akron, Mycale Plateau | kır | 1 isolated mountain 2 mountain top, mountain ridge 3 steppe, desert, level ground 4 edge | |
Aktai | personification of the shores | ak: white or ak-: to flow | tai: mountain | |
Aktaia | old name of Attica | ak: white or ak-: to flow | tai: mountain | |
Akyaieis | Attic demos, known from ephebe inscriptions of Roman times | ak: white | yağı: enemy, war, yağız: brown | having white brown horses? |
Alana ori | a mountain north of Caspian Sea | alan: open place, plain | or: a (higher) place, throne | I have already written a blog about that |
Alathar | of Scythian descent, fought as Magister militum of Thrace | Al: red, reddish | at: horse | There is a Türkis tribe called Alayuntlu and Chinese sources called them Alan, that means they who have reddish horses. There are town names in Buchara Alat and a well with this name. https://bilig.yesevi.edu.tr/yonetim/icerik/makaleler/3475-published.pdf. > Alat-er: the soldier from that tribe |
Alavicus, Alawic, Allobichus, Allabicos, Alabikos | Roman officer of Germanic origin | Ala/yala: something shiny, colorful; alav: flame | OT yalanguk: person, jalabač: prophet, messenger | Modern Türkish yalabık would a 100 % compatible, This name could have a Türkic origin (Old Turkic YALAGU, etc) |
Alavivus | Leader of a part of the Goths who crossed the Danube under Valens | yalav, alav: flame | Old version: yalavu, yalagu, etc. | |
Alazeir | King of Barka 6th century BC, father-in-law of Arcesilaus III. | ala: colorful, yala: to shine, > alaz: flame | er: soldier | |
Alazia | lost city of the Alazones | yalaz/alaz | flame | |
Alazygos | Sohn des Hlirrothios, Bruder des Seros | alacık | a kind tent or a small hut made of brushwood | |
There are many ALBA toponyms/hydronyms etc | all could be ALAV/ALAW meaning shiny, colorful, etc… | |||
Alkaios | many of them.For example the original name of Herakles, oder the son of Herakels | PT OT alkı > alka-: 1 to bless, praise 2 blessing, praise 3 curse | >alkıš: praise, blessing | Alka-i-os |
Alke | daughter of Olympus and Cybele | alkı | to applaud, to praise, to bless | |
Alke | dog of Aktaion | alkı | to applaud, to praise, to bless | aktay: a probable name of Türkic origin, ak: white, tay: mountain |
Alke | An Amazon | alkı | to applaud, to praise, to bless | Alka: a personal name in Old Türkic |
Alkeis | Daughter of Antaios, Peisander of Kameiros, also Barke | alkış | praise, blessing | |
Alkinoe | name of many female characters | alkın | to perish, to end, to become extinct | Kyrgyz alkın: to be out of breath, to be excited |
Alkis | name of many characters | alkış | praise, blessing | nickname of Athena in Pella |
Alko | daughter of Elektryon and Mideia | alkı | to applaud, to praise, to bless | |
Alkon | name of many male characters | alkın | to perish, to end, to become extinct | |
Allan | a place in Mesopotamia | alan | open place, plain | |
Alossos | place near Lagina in Caria | su | water | a town by the water (lake sea river) |
Alpes | name of many places in Europe | alp | difficult, dangerous | |
Alpis | alleged eponym of the Alps | alpı | many place names | alp: a hero |
Aluccius | According to Livius XXVI 50, this was the name of the Celtiberian chieftain to whom P. Scipio returned his captured bride untouched; in Frontin. str. II 11, 5 Allucius, in Dio fr. 57, 43 Ἀλλουκίῷ; Indibilis in Val. Max. IV 3, 1. | alık | wild, evil | absent-minded |
Ἀλούστου φρούριον, Aloustou Frourion | Castle on the southern Tauride coast, restored by Justinian | alış- | It evolved from the verb “to take together, to give and take”. This verb is derived from the Old Turkish verb al- “to take, to acquire” with the Old Turkish suffix +Iş-. | Today Alushta (Ukrainian and Russian: Алушта; Crimean Tatar: Aluşta; Greek: Ἄλουστον) |
Alybas | Ὁ ἐν Τεμέσῃ (in Lower Italy) ἥρως (Suid. s. Εὔθυμος), while he is otherwise always referred to as the heroic companion of Odysseus, Πολίτης (Od. X 224); an evil demon who strangled people and every year demanded the most beautiful maiden as a sacrifice of atonement until the Locrian Euthymus defeated him (see above). He is identical with Ἀλίβας (see above), i.e. a Hades hero of the Pylian Caucones who settled in Lower Italy. See Rohde Psyche 180f. | albasti | Al Basty (Turkish: Albastı; Uzbek: Alvasti; Tatar, Kyrgyz, Kazakh: Албасты, Chuvash: Алпастă, Azerbaijani: Albasdı, Russian: Албасты́) or Al Kardai is an ancient female spirit, the personification of guilt, found in folklore throughout the Caucasusmountains, with origins going as far back as Sumerianmythology.[1] | |
Alyssos | anger-quenching spring at Kynaitha in Arcadia. Paus. VIII 19, 3. | su | water | al: cheat, deception |
Amaia | Amaia (Ἀμαία), Name der Demeter in Troizen, wo Kore Ἀζησία hiess und das Sprichwort galt: ἡ Ἀ. τὴν Ἀζησίαν μετῆλθεν, Didym. b. Zenob. IV 20. Plut. prov. 41. Apostol. II 54. Said. s. Ἀμαία und Ἀζησία. Miller Mélanges 372. Erklärt wird A. als ‚Schnitterin‘ (v. ἀμάω, Spanheim zu Kallim. in Cer. 137. Preller Dem. u. Perseph. 325. Welcker Gr. Götterl. II 469 u. a.) oder als ‚Mutter‘ (Lobeck Aglaoph. 822, der Ἀμμαία schreibt und Ἀμμάς vergleicht). | ana/aba/apa | mother | |
Amarakos | (Ἀμάρακος). 1) A royal boy, son of Cinyras of Cyprus, who as an unguentarius once slipped and spilled several ointments, the resulting mixture of which was henceforth called 'amarakine' ointment; he himself was transformed into the fragrant plant Sampsuchos, which was also called A.: | amır-: | to be calm; to love | see Amarakos 2 by Pauly: spice plant, a type of marjoram |
Amisos | a town by the sea (Samsun) | su | water | |
Amnisus | Amnisos, also Amnissos and Amnisus (Greek: Ἀμνισός or Ἀμνισσός; Linear B: 𐀀𐀖𐀛𐀰 A-mi-ni-so),[1]is the current but unattested name given to a Bronze Age settlement on the north shore of Crete that was used as a port to the palace city of Knossos. It appears in Greek literature and mythology from the earliest times, but its origin is far earlier, in prehistory. The historic settlement belonged to a civilization now called Minoan. | su | water | |
Amoraios | King of the Derbikers, an eastern Iranian people, fights against Cyrus | amır-: to be calm; to love | ay: moon | Amıray: quiet moon |
Amorges | 3 Amorges: 1 Saka King, 2 Persian Commander, 3 Son f Persian Satrape | Amırgı | hunter | |
Amyke | mythical queen of Cyprus. | Amık | Son of en-Nasir Muhammed, a Mameluk King | the quiet one, lovely one? |
AMYKOS | There are many Amykos (male name) | Amık | ||
Amyros | There are many AMYROS (3 of 4 are related to rivers) | Amır | mist, fog, frost, rime, hoarfrost | sis, kırağı; AND AMUR a very big and known River in ASIA |
Anabainon | Allegedly former name of Maiandros | ana: mother (modern use: the main) | bay: rich | |
Anabatis | or apabatis, a horse-rider, knight | if apabatis more correct, we can assume apa < yabı: horse | bat-: to go down, see Info > | the rider; brachylogical: hippian agon, in which the riders jumped from the horses and ran alongside, holding the animal by the reins, similar to the κάλπη (see above); however, in this case mares were used, whereas in the agon of the [2015] ἀναβάται stallions were used. Cf. Krause Gymnastics and Agonistics I 571. The only information about the ἀναβάται is given by Pausanias V 9, 2, where ἀ. cannot be changed to ἀποβάται (see above); in contrast, in Dionys. Hal. A. R. VII 73 Ἀθηναῖοι δὲ καλοῦσι ἀναβάτας) undoubtedly erroneous ἀ. instead of ἀποβάτας, the error may have been committed by the author or a copyist. |
Apobatis/Ἀποβάτης | the jumper. In particular, this is the name given to those agonists who, as παραβάται (s.d.) of a war chariot, had to jump from the chariot in the middle of the journey and run a distance on foot in a race; cf. Dion. Halic. A. R. VII 73 (from the Roman Apobatenagon, which is said to have been modeled on the Greek one in every detail): ὅταν γὰρ τέλος αἱ τῶν ἵππων ἅμιλλαι λάβωνται, ἀποπηδῶντες ἀπὸ τῶν ἁρμάτων οἱ παροχούμενοι τοῖς ἡνιόχοις, οὓς οἱ ποιηταί μὲν παραβάτας, Ἀθηναῖοι δὲ καλοῦσιν ἀποβάτας, τὸν σταδιαῖον ἁμιλλῶντας δρόμον αὐτοὶ πρὸς ἀλλήλους. | bat-: | go down | apa < yabı: horse |
Ἀναβαθμοί/anabathamoi | the stairs | bas-: to press (~to step) | ||
Anaia | an Amazone | ana | mother | |
Anariakai | a people on the southern shore of the Caspian Sea between the Kadusioi and Amardoi | angar: that, there, angaru: towards it, against it, | yaka: edge > Angaryaka: that edge (shore) | Like Karşıyaka in Izmir meaning „the other side“, „the other shore“ |
>Kadusoi | above an other tribe adjacent to Anariakai | kadış | a belt with rings and metal (German Gürtel) | Kadış Mergen is a male character in a Tatar Türk legend; if we think twice, kadış and yaka are two dress-parts. yaka means collar, too. |
>Amardoi | other tribe adjacent to Anariakai | amar-/amır-: to be calm; to love | ||
Anartopraktoi (Anartes) | Caesar mentions b. G. VI 25 as an independent nation on the border of the Dacians and Germanic tribes | anar: there, that | toprak: soil, earth | A very Türkish toponym, both words are obv. Türkish |
Anisus | also Anisa, Anasus and similar, is the name of the tributary of the Danube, the Enns in Austria, in later documents | ana: mother (modern use: the main) | su: water | |
Andecavi | a „Celtic“ tribe, The Andecavi (also Andicavi, Andegavi, or Andigavi) were a Gallic tribe dwelling in Aremorica during the Roman period.wiki: They are mentioned as Andecavi (var. andic-, andeg-, andig-) by Pliny (1st c. AD),[1] Andecaviand Andecavos by Tacitus (early 2nd c. AD),[2] A̓ndíkauoi(Ἀνδίκαυοι; var. Ὀνδικαοῦαι, Ὠνδικαοῦαι) by Ptolemy (2nd c. AD),[3] and as Andicavos (var. andegauus, andecauos, andigabos, andigabus, andicabos) by Orosius (early 5th c. AD).[4][5] The etymology of the ethnonymAndecavī remains uncertain. | andık- | to swear, to take an oath | |
Angiskiri | a tribe under Dengizik (Son of Attila) | aŋız (angız): stalks left in the field after harvesting the crop | kır: mountain or the color gray | stalk-beige? the color of their horses? |
Angitia | a goddess amont the Marsi (an ancient Italic people) | angıt-: | to bow, to surrender, to show respect, | angıt: a kind of duck |
Animus | human soul | an | understanding | |
Ankara | a city in Italis | Ankara/Angara | a river in Asia | |
Anochos | a person, jogger | anık | ready, present | His father’s name Adamatas: ata: father, Atamata? father of the fathers |
Antacati | Saka tribe | antakı | there, located there, mentioned there | antakı-ata? fathers there (far away?) |
Antachara | according to Ptol. VII 1, 64 a town east of the Indus and the Sind desert, in the region of the Chatriaioi (Kšatriya) or in present-day Marwar on the river Lavanî. | antakı | there, located there, mentioned there | ara: space in between |
Antes | a Scythian people | ant | oath | |
Aoos (3x dealing with river) | 1. main drainage artery of Nordepeiros, 2. river in Cilicia, 3. River on Cyprus | ağız | mouth; mouth if a river, of a cleft | |
Apaisos | a city in Troas | su | water | apa: old, father, respectable |
Apama 6x | always a female name | apa: mother, older sister, aunt | -m: possessive suffix 1. person singular | |
Apappus | Egyptian King | appa appa | father’s father? | |
Aparnoi, Apartaei, Aparytai | 2 of 3 are a tribe, 1. of them is amale name | Apar | Awar in Old Turkish | 𐰯𐰺 Türk Script |
Apatenor | epithet of Zeus or Dionysos | appa: father | apat/apıt: plural of appa | see şadapıt a Türkic title meaning probably the men belong to şad; Old Türkic verb apıt- means to protect |
Appaitai | previously called Κερκῖται, a people on Skydises above Trapezus, Strabo XII 548. | apa: mother, older sister, aunt, in some Türkish dialects apay; (tai: mountain) | kerki: razor, adze, mattock, -t: plural suffix | the previous and the newer names are both Türkish |
Apsus 2x | a river in Epirus nova and a river in Middle Albania (Muzaka) | ap: to spring | su: water | |
Aqua | water, water spring | ak-: to flow | ||
Ara, Arae | name of many places (partly a “station“) | ara | a place in between; on one’s way, under way | |
Araxes | name of many rivers (Caucasia, Iran, etc) | arık | river | |
Arbakes | name of 3 men (all are fighters) | er beg > Erbeg | a kind of commander | |
Arcidava | a station in Dacia | oba: dwelling place | arka? (back), -d- a consonant between 2 vocals | |
Ardettos | rocky hills of the southeastern suburb of Athens | ard, art | mountain ridge, mountain pass | |
Argines | Slave in the pottery of the Arretinian M. Perennius, Ihm[1] Bonn. Jahrb. CII 115. | argın/argun | as a name it existed. a male name, a tribal name, ~arkun | it could mean the quiet one, the tired one, etc. |
Argyry | a god of Asia Minor who was equated with Zeus Panamaros, so that an inscription from Stratonikeia states | argur-: to make somebody tired, exhausted | ||
Aribaios | Ἀρίβαιος, the king of the Cappadocians, was slain by the Hyrcanians, in the time of Cyrus the Great (that is, 6th century BCE), according to Xenophon's Cyropaedia.[1] | arı-: to get clean > arığ: clean, pure | bay: the chieftain | Arıbay could be a chieftain name, a male name without any problem |
Aribazos (3x) | a male name from North Iran and Anatolian | arı-: to get clean > arığ: clean, pure | baş: head, chieftain | Arıbaş: a perfect chieftain name, a male name, (clear-headed) |
Arica | Island in Mari Oceano quod Gallias et Britannias interluit, Itin. maritime 510. | ?arık meaning island, from ara the space in between | ||
Arispara | According to Ptol. VII 1, 48 a city of the Kaspeiraioi, according to the indicated location in the present transitional landscape of Sar-hind. | ara | a space in between | |
Arka (5x) | name of towns | arka | back, back side of something; Tuvan arga: mountain forest (arka: back of a mountain), etc… | |
Arlissos | town in Caria | su | water | |
Arosis | Arotis, Arois, Aris, variants for Oroatis (see above), the border river of Persis and Susiana (now âb-i-Hindîân) in Nearchos, Arrian. Ind. 39, 9. | ara: space between two places | su: water | Arasu: border river |
Arrabaios | name of 4 males | arı-: to get clean > arığ: clean, pure | bay: the chieftain, richt | ara: space in between |
Arruns (5x) | Etruscan name | arın < arı-: to get clean, pure | ||
Artimpasa | Scythian deity | baş | head, chieftain | erdem?=virtue; er: soldier |
Artoarta | city in present-day Afghanistan | orta | the middle, place where the palace of the king stands | art: back of sth |
Artuba | Place in Caria, in the area of κοινὸν Ταρμιανῶν, Bull. Hell. X 486. | art: back of | oba: dwelling place | |
Arybas (2x), Arybbas (2x) | a male name | arı-: to get clean > arığ: clean, pure | baş: head, chieftain | |
Arzygius | a male name | ercik | the small/young soldier/man | |
Asaioi | A Sarmatian tribe | azay-: to decline | açay: father, old father | |
Asmanoi | A Sarmatian tribe | azman | Azman could have many meanings like the color of the horses (yellowish); could mean big, great; a castrated horse… shortly it could be easily explained with Türkish words | |
Assos | tributary of the Cephisos in Phocis | az: not much | su: water | |
Astai | A Thracian tribe | az: not much | tai: mountain | aş-: to pass, aš: food |
Astragalos | Knucklebone | saçra-: to jump | aşık is a kind of game in Central Asia where you can throw your bones on the ground…from aş-: to pass | |
Atabulus | a wind in Apulia | ata: descendant | bur-: to smell, when the odor goes high | |
Atabyria, Ataburios, Atabyrion | Old name of Rhodes < from a nickname of Zeus < Wiki: was a cultic epithet of the god Zeus from Greek mythology, under which he was probably worshipped in the form of a bull.[1] | ata-bua-er | father-bull-man | |
Atacam | a Hun boy | ata: descendant | kam: shaman | |
Atalante | an island | ata | island | Modern Türkish ada |
Atanius | a Roman knight under Gaius, Dio LIX 8, 3. | Atan | castrated camel | OR atan-: to gain fame; to be appointed; to be named |
Atas | the name of a sonf of Priamos | ata | descendant | |
Ateas | a Scythian king | ata | descendant | on some coins we see the name „atails“ and not ateas (ataias). |
Athamania | a place in Greece | ataman | the great Ata (father) | <Athamanians |
Athaulf | King of Visigoths | Atawulf | father-wolf | a hybrid name (like a steppe kingdom itself) |
Athletei | competitors | at- | to throw, to shoot > atıl-: be thrown away | we can imagine that the first competitions were with military character (notice: IE origin is very disputed). OR ATLI: a knight, a horse-rider, OR ATLI he who has a name OR atlat-: to send sbd to an attack |
Athrys | a river | adır- | to seperate to deprive | |
Athymbros | a male name | atım | marksman, shooter | |
Athyras (2x) | a river in Thrace | adır- | to seperate to deprive | |
Atis | the King of Boii | atı | male relative, nephew | boy: tribe |
Atizyes | Satrap of Greater Phrygia under Darius III, fell fighting at Issus in 333 BC. | atız | A dam between two streams for water to pass through | atış-: to curse, a quarrel |
atta | affectionate address to older people (Uraltes Wort) | ata | father, descendant | |
Attanassos | a place in Phyrigia | su | water | |
Attelabos | grasshopper | atla: to jump | bö: insekt | like in Scarabeo or Scorpion (agarbio) BÖ should be Türkish |
Atys (2x) | male name | atı | Brother, male relative, nephew, kid of your siblings | |
Autlebis/Atlebis | A Thracian chieftain | atlı | he who has a horse, he who has a name | |
Autraka, Αὔτρακα | Place of the Vaccaeans in Hispania Tarraconensis, only mentioned in Ptol. II 6, 49; the location has not been determined. | otrak | island | Like in Samothrake or Thrace |
Auzakia | a place in Scythia | uzak | far away | |
Axon/Axona/Axos | river names | ak-su | white water | |
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