This is a 'list of the
etymologies of
continent names'.
==
Africa ==
The
ancient Romans used the name ''Africa terra'' --- "land of the Afri" (plural, or "Afer" singular) --- for the northern part of the continent, corresponding to modern-day
Tunisia. The origin of ''Afer'' may be the Phoenician ''afar'', dust; the
Afridi tribe, who dwelt in Northern Africa around the area of
Carthage;
Greek ''aphrike'', without cold; or
Latin ''aprica'', sunny.
==
America ==
So-named after the Italian explorer
Amerigo Vespucci (who styled himself ''Americus Vespucius'' in
Latin), who, following his four voyages to the Americas, first developed the idea that the newly discovered western lands were in fact a continent. In recognition thereof, the German cartographer
Martin Waldseemüller named the new continent after the Italian explorer's first name. Amerigo Vespucci was named after
Saint Americus of
Hungary. (See also
Naming of America.)
A few alternative theories regarding the continent's naming have been proposed, but none of them have any widespread acceptance. One alternative first proposed by a Bristol antiquary and naturalist, Alfred Hudd, was that America is derived from
Richard Amerike, a merchant from Bristol, England who is believed to have financed
John Cabot's voyage of discovery to Newfoundland in 1497. Waldseemüller's maps appear to incorporate information from the early British journeys to North America. The theory holds that a variant of Amerike's name appeared on an early British map (of which however no copies survive) and that this was the true inspiration for Waldseemüller. (See more at
Richard Amerike).
One antique map shows the continent labelled "North America or Mexicana" and "South America or Peruana".
==
Antarctica ==
Originally from Greek ''antarktikos'', from ''anti'' + ''arktikos'' "arctic". Literally "opposite the Arctic". ''Arktikos'' comes from ''Arktos'', the Greek name for the constellation of the Great Bear
Ursa Major, visible only in the Northern Hemisphere.
==
Asia ==
In early Classical times, the term "Asia" referred only to the small region known today as Anatolia (a part of Turkey). Eventually however, the name came to denote the much larger land area with which we associate it today.
The etymology of Asia can only be guessed at. The strongest possibility is
that it derives from a borrowed
Semitic root "Asu", which means varyingly 'rising' or 'light', of course a directional referring to the sunrise, Asia thus meaning 'Eastern Land'.
==
Australia ==
The name Australia is derived from the
Latin ''Australis'', meaning ''of the South''. Legends of an "unknown land of the south" (''
terra australis incognita'') date back to the Roman times and were commonplace in mediaeval geography, but they were not based on any actual knowledge of the continent.
==
Europe ==
The term ''Europe'' referred once to only a small land area, roughly that part of
Thrace (Trakya in Turkish) that is now part of
Turkey. Through the centuries however, it came to denote the whole land mass with which we are familiar today.
The name ''Europe'' derives from
Europa, probably a compound meaning "broad-faced" (referring to the Earth), ''eurus'' (PIE ''
★ wer-'', "broad") meaning "broad" and ''ōps'' (PIE ''
★ okw-'', "eye") meaning "face". A less likely possibility is that it derives from the ancient Sumerian and Semitic root "Ereb", which carries the meaning of "darkness" or "descent", a reference to the region's western location in relation to Mesopotamia, the Levantine Coast, Anatolia, and the Bosporus. Thus the term would have meant the 'land of the setting of the Sun' or, more generically, 'Western land'.
In Greek mythology ''Europa'' was the beautiful daughter of a Phoenician king named
Agenor, or Phoenix. As
Zeus saw her, he transformed himself into a gentle white bull and approached her and her playing friends. She climbed onto the bull's back and it began so swim off to Crete, where she fell in love with the then-changed-back Zeus and had three sons with him (
Minos,
Rhadamanthus and
Sarpedon, the first two of which constitute, together with
Aeacus, the three judges of the
underworld).
See also
★
Toponymy
★
Lists of etymologies
★
Etymology
★
Onomatology
★
Name
★
List of country name etymologies
★
List of river name etymologies
External links
★
Map of Selected Placename Etymologies in the Americas, from www.radicalcartography.net