Abstract:
The report discusses the onomastic empirical material of the indigenous
historical-ethnographic region of Georgia − Dvaleti and Dvals (Dval −
ethnic Georgians, Georgian ethnographic group) considering the onomastic
universals, its linguistic and extralinguistic aspects. The study pays special
attention to toponymy, in particular, oikonyms, as lexical units denoting
habitat, the in-depth study of which allows us to consider this linguistic
phenomenon in different contexts, in particular, to determine its relation
to different fields of science (geography, geology, biology and astrology),
history, archeology, Psycholinguistics and its relation to extralinguistic and
psycholinguistic factors. The report discusses onomastics in terms of the
origin of each onom and their relation to the spoken language or already
extinct language (Ossetian, Georgian). Structural-semantic analysis of Dvaleti
onomastics, especially the linguistic study of oikonyms (Oikonimia is
a Greek word οἶκοςὄνομα, which means “dwelling”, “city”) confirms the
“addressee” unambiguity of toponyms and emphasizes the importance of
onomas Archeology, Economic History, Folklore. Often toponyms are older
than written monuments, in this case toponymy is the subject of research
in historical lexicology, dialectology, archeology ”(Glonti, 1988: 235).
A review of Dvaleti oikonyms confirms that oikonyms are formed
during the settlement of ethnic groups in a particular area. These terms are
related to various historical-geographical, religious-cultural events. The report
shows how the onomas change diachronically with the epoch-making
changes in the Dvaleti area, or this onomastka retains its original appearance
and, better than all historical sources, unmistakably “tells” the history
of this ethnic group (language and linguistic material is history that cannot
be falsified).
The report analyzes Dvaleti onomastics in full and, especially, the
“core” of toponymy − oikonomies, the lexical meaning of these toponyms,
the etymology of the names, the structural of the name, the syntagmatic
and paradigmatic relations of the nominations. The results of extralinguistic,
psycholinguistic, semasiological and contrast studies of the problem
are presented together with the linguistic relations. The report discusses
the types of oikonyms: geographical, historical, anthroponymic, zoonymous,
folk (etymological), metamorphotic. Based on all the above, it is concluded that the Dval are one of the
extinct ethnolinguistic groups of Georgians, whose habitat is located in the
territory of the historic Dvaleti in the Central Caucasus, as evidenced by the
Georgian onoms in the area and their linguistic analysis. This conclusion is
in full agreement with the results of Dvaleti historiographical and ethnographic
research.