How Did The Regions Of Spain Get Their Names?

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  • čas přidán 7. 06. 2024
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    SOURCES AND FURTHER READING
    Autonomous communities of Spain: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autonom...
    The regions of Spain: www.red2000.com/spain/region/...
    Galicia: ilg.usc.es/agon/wp-content/upl...
    Asturias: lligaceltadasturies.wordpress...
    Cantabria: www.etymonline.com/word/canta...
    La Rioja: catavino.net/what-is-the-etym....
    Aragorn: www.etymonline.com/word/Arago...
    Catalonia: books.google.co.uk/books?id=n...
    Castile and León: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castile...
    Madrid: theculturetrip.com/europe/spa...
    Extremadura: onthenamesofplaces.blogspot.co....
    Castilla-La Mancha: www.spanishdict.com/answers/1...!
    Valencia: www.etymonline.com/word/valencia
    Andalusia: www.etymonline.com/word/andal...
    Murcia: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murcia#....
    Balearic: www.etymonline.com/word/balearic
    Ceuta: www.turismodeceuta.com/other-...
    Melilla: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melilla...
    Canary: www.worldatlas.com/articles/d...

Komentáře • 321

  • @NameExplain
    @NameExplain  Před 3 lety +57

    What region of Spain are you watching from?

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un Před 3 lety +101

    Fun fact: "Oja" has no meaning, it is actually Ojo which means eye but can also be used to say "Look Out!" Or "Caution!"
    *The more you know*

    • @mkra7769
      @mkra7769 Před 3 lety +15

      Kim Jong-un speaks Spanish??
      The more you know indeed...

    • @timomastosalo
      @timomastosalo Před 3 lety +6

      It may be some dialectal version from the verb oír, where you get the command form oye (look, watch) etc.

    • @aqpatt4675
      @aqpatt4675 Před 3 lety +1

      @@timomastosalo no it isn't, also he pronuncies the J wrong, it's like the H from "hello" but stronger, and not like an Y

    • @timomastosalo
      @timomastosalo Před 3 lety +1

      @@aqpatt4675 Yeah, I know Oja is said like that. But doesn't it also come from the verb oír? O was only saying how oye is said. But like an 'eye' is ojo, so I think oja has something to do with watching. Is ojar a verb like 'to eye, to ogle, to watch'? To do something with eyes. Like ojala is 'maybe' - but does it mean 'we'll see (it)?

    • @aqpatt4675
      @aqpatt4675 Před 3 lety +2

      @@timomastosalo oja doesn't come from "oír", yes it is a conjugation of "ojar" but this verb is in disuse and nowadays people say "ojear". "Ojalá" comes from an Arab word. Anyways I've looked up the etymology of the Río Oja and it seems it comes from a basque or latin word related with forest.

  • @Sonrhayyt
    @Sonrhayyt Před 3 lety +85

    Spaniard here.
    "Oja" means nothing in Spanish, the word you are looking for is "ojo!" like in "eye" which indeed means "watch out" if used as an expression in spoken Spanish.
    Closest thing to the name of the river in proper Spanish would be "hoja", which means "leaf" .

  • @rateeightx
    @rateeightx Před 3 lety +56

    9:25 Actually The Word 'Vandal' Is Derived From The Name Of The Tribe The Vandals, Who Were Among The Germanic Peoples To Invade Iberia, Infact, Southern Spain (Andalucia) Was One Of The Main Places They Ruled, Before Getting Pushed Out By The Visigoths And Moving To Modern-Day Tunisia.

  • @d.p.2375
    @d.p.2375 Před 3 lety +58

    ok he seriously doesn't even try to pronounce the names even in a thick english accent that's just him guessing 😭😭😭LMAO

  • @LandgraabIV
    @LandgraabIV Před 3 lety +96

    6:45 Although people did and do still associate León with león (lion) because they are homophones, the origin of the name is from the Roman legion (Legio VI Victrix) who founded the settlement. So it's from Latin "legio, legionis" (legion). The loss of Latin -g- in Spanish was systematic (cf. legere > leer).

  • @andres315
    @andres315 Před 3 lety +21

    The name of Asturias is not of Basque origin but Celtic, just as Galicia and Cantabria. It comes from the Celtic tribe of the Astures, and their name is thought to come from the Celtic "stour", meaning river

  • @ScipeoX
    @ScipeoX Před 3 lety +43

    Extremadura in spanish means hard border, during the reconquista the land that borders the muslim part was named that way so many parts of spain during its history have been named Extremadura.
    La mancha (stain) its named like that because in ancient times there was a big forest in the land so in the maps it looked like there was a stain (those old spaniards had a lot of imagination to name the region cause of that).

  • @sehnsuchtherz
    @sehnsuchtherz Před 3 lety +31

    I can't begin to count the number of mistakes in this video....

  • @cliodeo
    @cliodeo Před 3 lety +17

    Patrick, I love your videos but in this in particular there were three mistakes...
    1st: León got its name from the Roman legion "Legio VI Victrix" which its camp were established there, it may surpise even to spanish folks that it doesn't came from lion (león) than from legion (legión) but with the passing of time the "g" was lost, making it sound like the spanish word for "lion", that's why its flag depicts a lion.
    2nd: Certainly La Mancha can be translated to "the stain" but there's another meaning, speaking about territorial entities a "Mancha" is a territory that is different from the rest. So etymologically it means literally "the other Castille".
    3rd: There is a misspelling with Melilla.

  • @ind-m-178
    @ind-m-178 Před 3 lety +54

    You forgot to mention that Asturia and Galicia also have their own unique languages...

    • @jbonillaguitar
      @jbonillaguitar Před 3 lety +10

      As does catalunya, Valencia and Basque.

    • @ind-m-178
      @ind-m-178 Před 3 lety +6

      @@jbonillaguitar I mean he mentioned those...

    • @JL-ex7yp
      @JL-ex7yp Před 3 lety

      As does most areas

    • @ind-m-178
      @ind-m-178 Před 3 lety +1

      @@JL-ex7yp No only Asturia, Galicia, Catalonia, Balearic Islands, and Valencia have unique languages, the rest speak Spanish

    • @jesuluc0885
      @jesuluc0885 Před 3 lety

      Hey Asturias has not its own language it has its own dialect and its very similar to spanish its practically the same. Also no one speaks it. Im am from asturias and havent heard someone speaking it in my whole live.
      Sorry for my broken english btw

  • @xromulorcorreax
    @xromulorcorreax Před 3 lety +37

    9:20 the etymology of Andalusía is mirkier than that, but the "Vandals" were not named after "vandalism", which is the modern sense of the word. "Vandalism" was named after the Germanic tribe of the Vandals and not vice versa.

    • @lorenzmaut3708
      @lorenzmaut3708 Před 3 lety +3

      Yes you are right, so they hated so much the things the vandals did to their lands that they connoted their name with such a awful meaning.

  • @interfear1
    @interfear1 Před 3 lety +97

    Patrick, I love you, but I was cringing at your pronunciation of those Spanish names 😂

    • @lerquian1970
      @lerquian1970 Před 3 lety +14

      I can get that he would butcher names from other places, but Spanish has relatively easy pronunciation rules and they're almost 100% consistent

    • @TomLWaters
      @TomLWaters Před 3 lety +1

      Also, apparently not rehearsed, as some names get multiple pronunciations as he runs through the scripts. It's like he's just hitting them cold as they come up.

    • @stvp68
      @stvp68 Před 3 lety +7

      I find that Brits generally massacre the pronunciation of non-English words

    • @maxis2k
      @maxis2k Před 3 lety +1

      "Castilla La Macha. You know, like Macha Tea. So anyway, La Mancha...."

    • @SteveFrench_420
      @SteveFrench_420 Před rokem +1

      He pronounced most of them a couple of ways, covering his bases. Take La Mancha for example. At 8:00 he pronounced it La ManKia. But at 8:11 he pronounced it ManCHia. I cringe every time there's a word that begins with "Th". He pronounces em with an "F". He and Thoughty2 have the same speech impediment. Or should I say Foughty2?

  • @oanaomg7298
    @oanaomg7298 Před 3 lety +59

    I like that every time you say Ceuta, the pronunciation changes :))

    • @LandgraabIV
      @LandgraabIV Před 3 lety +4

      Haha I noticed that too

    • @lewatoaofair2522
      @lewatoaofair2522 Před 3 lety +9

      Manka vs Mancha
      Castilia vs Castilila
      Patrick has gotten into this habit of bouncing between pronunciations. I guess after years of being scolded for his pronunciation (I’m one of those scolders), he’s decided to pronounce these names in different ways in the hopes he gets it right.

    • @oanaomg7298
      @oanaomg7298 Před 3 lety +3

      @@lewatoaofair2522 😂😂😂
      Yeah, I think you’re right. Mission successfully failed.
      Sometimes I feel the pronunciation butchering is more entertaining than the actual content 😅

    • @THE3FATGUYS
      @THE3FATGUYS Před 3 lety +6

      None of which were right

    • @migspeculates
      @migspeculates Před 3 lety +2

      Yeah, when it "ceuts" him 😂✌
      I tried.

  • @PockASqueeno
    @PockASqueeno Před 3 lety +24

    Just an FYI - “ja” in Spanish is pronounced like “ha,” not “ya.”

    • @lerquian1970
      @lerquian1970 Před 3 lety +4

      J in general is pronounced as the english H

    • @TomLWaters
      @TomLWaters Před 3 lety +4

      @@lerquian1970 It's a velar fricative, more like German ch; stronger than English h

  • @mfvieira89
    @mfvieira89 Před 3 lety +40

    It's Melilla, not Mililla... I usually love your videos, but there are lots of mistakes on this one

  • @ReticulatedViper
    @ReticulatedViper Před 3 lety +9

    Leon, Castile, Aragon... I’ve always thought those names sounded like awesome fantasy kingdoms with dragons, and palaces, and wizards and such. They have such an interesting history, it’s a shame they were never really touched on in any of the history classes I’ve taken.

  • @avennui
    @avennui Před 3 lety +42

    Awe, LOVE, your channel but this video seems a bit rushed in terms of research and pronunciation. Also! Spanish is not as tricky as french or Italian, most everything has a consistent pronunciation and can be read in English. No need to roll your Rs, I think just using the English pronunciation suffices, otherwise, it sounds like an L (a global and historically common human sound mutation). I think the main sounds to keep in mind are that "ll" (doubles Ls) make a sort of y sound, ñ, is ny/ni as in "caNYon" or "oNIon," j is H and ignore H lolz

    • @LandgraabIV
      @LandgraabIV Před 3 lety +14

      That's true, so many mistakes... Most of the etymologies he gives are either completely wrong or extremely simplified.

    • @avennui
      @avennui Před 3 lety

      I know native Spanish speakers will get annoyed with me saying J sounds like H (not to mention the letter Z) but for the purposes of simplifying pronunciation for an English speaker those are my tips.

  • @barraman.
    @barraman. Před 3 lety +17

    Bro you messed up the León one

  • @julianxamo7835
    @julianxamo7835 Před 3 lety +50

    It's very weird how you mispronounce something just to pronounce it right seconds later or vice-versa, I think you should pay more attention to that, maybe try listening to the pronunciation on YT or Google translate and saying it out loud a few times before recording the take, even if you don't do that, Spanish has a pretty straightforward pronunciation and you can "sound out" like 99% of the words

    • @julianxamo7835
      @julianxamo7835 Před 3 lety +5

      I'm gonna have to dislike this man, I'm sorry, but this seems so poorly researched and fact-checked unlike most of your videos...

    • @BurnBird1
      @BurnBird1 Před 3 lety

      @@julianxamo7835 This video isn't particularly worse than his other videos, it's just that you already have knowledge on the subject and thus can point out when he's wrong.

  • @Strav9
    @Strav9 Před 3 lety +16

    You sure Galicia doesn’t come from the same origins as the second part of “Portugal” come?
    “Callaeci” seems to be just to similar

    • @pepsdeps
      @pepsdeps Před 3 lety +6

      Portugal could be the port (puerto) of the callaeci (puerto de los galos?) Maybe?

    • @ericacaa
      @ericacaa Před 3 lety +9

      Yes, portugal comes from porto de gália, port of galicia

  • @odzevens3352
    @odzevens3352 Před 3 lety +18

    I appreciate videos like these however if one does not look at the comments in these videos...they are in danger of harbouring a lot of false information and the lack of context and disregard of pronunciation is quite off-putting.

  • @EJavierPaniaguaLaconich
    @EJavierPaniaguaLaconich Před 3 lety +11

    "Cetúa" and "Mililla"? I mean... it's name explain. Should get the names right.

  • @snowcold5932
    @snowcold5932 Před 3 lety +18

    Euskaldunak is the basque word for "basque people", the geographic region itself goes by Euskadi instead

  • @crazyoskie90
    @crazyoskie90 Před 3 lety +14

    FYI it's Basque Country and not county

    • @Ggdivhjkjl
      @Ggdivhjkjl Před 3 lety

      The text on screen read so.

    • @Ggdivhjkjl
      @Ggdivhjkjl Před 3 lety +1

      The text on screen read so.

    • @crazyoskie90
      @crazyoskie90 Před 3 lety

      @@Ggdivhjkjl yet he pronounced it multiple times as county

  • @Esteban-lh7qz
    @Esteban-lh7qz Před 3 lety +14

    5:13 no it doesn't

  • @dallasrover5515
    @dallasrover5515 Před 3 lety +14

    I thought the Vandals thing was the other way around. It was the name of the people and the modern descriptive term "vandal" comes from how the Romans saw them.

  • @ff_crafter
    @ff_crafter Před 3 lety +19

    Why you sometimes pronounce the "j" as /x/ and sometimes as /j/
    Spanish "j" is always pronounced as /x/

  • @Elsenoromniano
    @Elsenoromniano Před 3 lety +4

    Somo corrections
    Leon is actually not name after Lions, but comes from Legion is, because the city grew from the placement of the Legio Séptima Gemina. The whole region got the name from the city. Then it got changed into León, which sounds just like the animal, so they adopted that as their shield.
    La mancha does not come from the Spanish word from Spain, rather, it comes from two possible arabic origins, the first Al-manya, meaning plateau, because the region is a plateau, or Al-Mansha, meaning arid land, which is also fitting, since it is a very dry and arid region.
    Also the term vandal comes from the Germanic tribe and not the other way around. So the vandals were not called that because they acted like vandals, rather people who act in destructive ways are call that because they act like the Vandals. Also, initially the term was only applied to the South part where Andalusia is located, since that was the part conquered by the Vandals, but since that was the important part for the Muslims (since there was where their bigger cities like Seville, Corduba or Granada were located) they applied it to the whole Peninsula.

  • @rateeightx
    @rateeightx Před 3 lety +14

    2:06 I Always Thought The Name Of Galicia Was Related To Gaul, Like Galatia In Anatolia, As It Was One Of The Areas Of Iberia With Most Notable Celtic Influence.

    • @WillGo7
      @WillGo7 Před 3 lety +1

      Yes, Gaul derives from Gallaeci as well, as does Portugal

  • @mateolopez2099
    @mateolopez2099 Před 3 lety +14

    The name of leon does not come from lion, it actually comes from legion as the capital of Leon (the city of leon) used to be the encampment of the IV Legion.
    Also Galicia used to be the kingdom gallecia which was modern day northern Portugal and Galicia. Galicia like the basque and the catalans are their own ethnic group aswell with their own language.
    Nice video overall, sorry if any explanation sounded too pedantic. You can look up in google city of leon or kingdom of galecia for more info!

    • @angyliv8040
      @angyliv8040 Před 2 měsíci

      Lo siento pero es el mismo grupo étnico. Mi madre es gallega (y toda su familia de generaciones) y padre catalán (y toda su familia) ambos y yo nos hicimos test de adn y salió ibero en gran parte y luego celta de las “islas británicas” y de otras regiones como Italia, sardeña, Francia y Alemania. E incluso báltico.

    • @pays-de-vitae
      @pays-de-vitae Před 8 dny

      @@angyliv8040 Los grupos étnicos no tienen nada que ver con la génetica o incluso las nacionalidades, contrario a lo que mucha gente cree. En Europa, la mayoria de grupos étnicos se distinguen unos de otros por idioma, identidad compartida y cultura. Más o menos, grupo étnico puede ser sinónimo con el concepto de una nación (que no es lo mismo que un país; es decir, estado soverano y reconocido por la ley internacional). Talvez en una era tan globalizada estas diferencias ya no son tan 'relevantes' para mucha gente, pero siguen siendo importantes culturalmente. La gente gallega y la gente catalana tiene historias únicas y diferentes y decir que es la misma "étnia" solo demuestra que no sabes de lo que estas hablando. Te recomiendo mirar "Ethnologe" para cambiar tu perspectiva, es una enciclopedia larga de las distintas identidades culturales del mundo e idiomas.
      Grupo étnico: identidad cultural compartida (ej: Gallego, Irlandes, Polaco, Corso, Galés, etc.)
      Nacionalidad: el derecho de ser reconocido como ciudadano de un pais (Español, Francés, Italiano)
      Raza: una categoría socialmente construida que se utiliza en algunos paises para dividir a la gente ("Blanco", "Negro", "Mestizo")
      Y sobre tu test de ADN, no te deberias tomar una app tan serio. Tu identidad cultural o étnia se marca por la cultura con la que te identificas, no por tus génes o 'ancestros'. Esta es mi opinión porque tecnicamente descendemos de todo tipo de grupos que han habitado Europa. Es como esos tipicos estadounidenses que piensan que son "irlandeses" simplemente porque sus tatarabuelos vinieron de alli. Ademas, las clasificaciones étnicas de una app son completamente subjectivas y no se alinean con la realidad cultural de Europa.

  • @lewatoaofair2522
    @lewatoaofair2522 Před 3 lety +12

    10:13 *Melilla

  • @matthewgaddie4152
    @matthewgaddie4152 Před 3 lety +14

    I'm surprised that when talking about Murcia you didn't mention the similar sounding name of the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Mercia.

  • @summerwell8262
    @summerwell8262 Před 3 lety +11

    Im from Spain and we also call them “regions”. Both names are valid in Spanish

    • @paununs8719
      @paununs8719 Před 3 lety +1

      Hmm, I'm not sure. Region is a generic term, so it may apply to comunidades autónomas, but also "regions" that predate these administrative units, like La Alcarria, El bierzo, Levante, La Mancha, Baja Andalucía and so on. He could have sticked to Autonomías.

  • @GenlukD
    @GenlukD Před 3 lety +5

    "Oya in spanish means whatch out" me as a spanish speaking person: "Oya is a word?!

  • @moritamikamikara3879
    @moritamikamikara3879 Před 3 lety +17

    There was a tribe that migrated through Iberia to get to Africa beneath it that was just called the Vandals.
    As far as I'm aware, vandal as it exists in English did not mean the same thing in Latin, so please talk more about the Vandals.

    • @moritamikamikara3879
      @moritamikamikara3879 Před 3 lety +4

      Additionally with the balearic slingers, yes they used slings, but it's a different type of sling.
      Thing the thing that David killed Goliath with, a piece of cloth you stick a stone or a lead ball in and swing around your head before letting go.

    • @kaloarepo288
      @kaloarepo288 Před 3 lety

      Vandals were originally from Scandinavia and migrated south to Italy,Spain and north Africa until their kingdom was destroyed by the Byzantines.Romans saw them as destructive barbarians because they sacked many cities including Rome-hence the word "vandalism" to describe wanton destruction.I once read that the "van"part of the name means "strength.""vitality" and is related to the Latin word for the goddess of love"Venus/venereal and also to Venice and to the Slavic tribe of the Wends.

    • @Mozgarage
      @Mozgarage Před 2 lety

      History reveals that the Papacy destroyed three kingdoms, (1) The Heruli in A.D. 493, (2) the Vandals in A.D. 534, (3) the Ostrogoths in A.D. 538.

  • @kevinfromsales9445
    @kevinfromsales9445 Před 3 lety +7

    Thank Dios for the comments section this video is filled with misinformation!

  • @mfvieira89
    @mfvieira89 Před 3 lety +23

    The Duero/Douro river starts in Castilla y León, not Extremadura!

  • @thedownfallparodist1145
    @thedownfallparodist1145 Před 3 lety +1

    Good Video!

  • @ivanmehboob
    @ivanmehboob Před 3 lety +19

    "LL" in spanish isnt the same as "LL" in english. "LL" in spanish is pronounced like a y (or a j in certain latin amercan dialects), so it would be "Casti-yah" not "Cas-tila".

    • @daddyleon
      @daddyleon Před 3 lety +2

      And the. "Spanish J" also is pronounced quite differently.

    • @ivanmehboob
      @ivanmehboob Před 3 lety +4

      @@daddyleon yea is sounds like and h and h in Spanish is silent

    • @daddyleon
      @daddyleon Před 3 lety +1

      @@ivanmehboob The American Spanish, yes; but European Spanish has is more like the Dutch G or Arabic Kh or Gh

    • @joanignasi91
      @joanignasi91 Před 3 lety

      In European Spanish LL is not pronounced like Y but a sound that doesn't exist in English between an l and a y represented by ʎ in the phonetic alphabet.

    • @Aetherguy-cb9bu
      @Aetherguy-cb9bu Před 3 lety

      Es "castisha" gallego listo

  • @AFrogInTheStars
    @AFrogInTheStars Před 3 lety

    I’m a sucker for name explain videos. Please dont stop

  • @kenzooz9227
    @kenzooz9227 Před 3 lety +4

    Mellila comes from the berber root MLL meaning white. There are plenty of places in north African named after that root (In Morocco: Beni Mellal, Titt Melil, Algeria: Mlila etc...)

  • @davidprimo8236
    @davidprimo8236 Před 3 lety +2

    We usually call "regions" those which were recognized between 1833 and, when ACs appeared, 1980s. Those regions differ slightly from ACs; besides, "region" is used as the counterpart of "nation", here, and many ACs consider themseves as nations. Just a note of your begining note xDD

  • @IanCookUS
    @IanCookUS Před 3 lety +14

    a lot of this seems poorly prepared, from the research to fact checks to the pronunciation

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican Před 3 lety +14

    Yup, island of the dogs
    Not to mention, dogs are also on the Canary Islands flag! The islands are so beautiful. I'm of Canarian descent so it's nice whenever someone mentions the islands

    • @Aetherguy-cb9bu
      @Aetherguy-cb9bu Před 3 lety

      So you're Canarian? Give me every Guanche word.

    • @antimatterg
      @antimatterg Před 3 lety

      I saw you everywhere, then I read your about page and understood why...

  • @mannyfernandez1713
    @mannyfernandez1713 Před 3 lety +1

    I must add that madrid is named after the madroño tree that dots the area, not necessarily for the river

  • @phil..rubi123
    @phil..rubi123 Před 3 lety +3

    4:12
    ”The Region of NAVALA”

  • @aro4cinglife
    @aro4cinglife Před 3 lety +3

    5:13well i didn´t know THAT word existed, also y do u pronounce "r" like "l"

  • @pepsdeps
    @pepsdeps Před 3 lety +1

    Another explanation I've heard for Madrid is that it comes from the Madroño tree (which is in their coat of arms, along with a bear). Madroño would be the tree, and thr city, having many Madroños, was called Madrid (place of many madroños)

  • @chrishowland8857
    @chrishowland8857 Před 3 lety +2

    Before the Great War my great great grandparents (on my moms side) were from Galicia in modern day Poland

  • @victorosorio5252
    @victorosorio5252 Před 3 lety

    Actually, the Kingdom of León got its name from the city of León, which is called that way because it was a major encampment for the Legio VII Septima in the early Roman Empire. All the lion motifs came later.
    Also a popular theory says La Mancha gets is name from how flat it is, appearing almost like an inkblot.
    Nice vid!

  • @Mervinthefish
    @Mervinthefish Před 3 lety

    The Balearic slingers were used as a mercenary slingers by the Romans and the Carthaginians in the Punic wars , they were well liked as they were extremely proficient with their slings, some record stating they slung rocks/lead shot weighing 300g over 200 meter, if I remember right.

  • @adrianramirez221
    @adrianramirez221 Před 3 lety

    An interesting aside I'm surprised you didn't get into was that León wasn't actually named for lions, but for being the site of a roman legion settlement. Latin "Legion" became the Leonese "Llion" became the Castillian "León."

  • @user-hs3tq4lm1c
    @user-hs3tq4lm1c Před 2 měsíci

    In the castilla-la mancha name the "mancha" stands for a a zone in the center of the region with yellow colour land

  • @gonzalodefresnodiaz9898

    I'm Spanish. Very good video.

  • @senor-achopijo3841
    @senor-achopijo3841 Před 7 měsíci

    It is believed that La Mancha comes from the Arabic word "Manshaf", which, apparently, could mean something along the lines of "land without water" (it's a pretty dry place) or "elevated place" (as it's part of the Iberian Plateau).

  • @ericacaa
    @ericacaa Před 3 lety +2

    In brazil, people who are fair-skinned, light color eyes and hair are nicknamed "galego", literally "galician-portuguese".

    • @Fati.Ferreiro
      @Fati.Ferreiro Před 3 lety

      Oh wow i didnt know how interesting
      Greetings from Galicia😄

    • @pays-de-vitae
      @pays-de-vitae Před 8 dny

      nah, galego means galician. galician-portuguese in galician is "galego-portugues" or "galaico-portugues"

  • @username65585
    @username65585 Před 3 lety +1

    Murcia and Mercia?

  • @fedejr712
    @fedejr712 Před 3 lety +2

    Explain the names of the Provinces of Argentina please!

  • @nenu
    @nenu Před 3 lety

    Obviously Navarra comes from valley.
    Roughly 1/3 of the people who repopulated central Spain during the Reconquista were of basque origing, and central Spain has a large number of towns and villages called "Nava de something" as those towns are located on a flat land next to that something

  • @arielgaray302
    @arielgaray302 Před 2 lety

    Actually, I found a mistake. "León" as in "Castilla y León" does not come from the word for Lion, but for the latin word for "Legion" ==> "Legio" because there was a roman legion stationed here during the times of the empire. "Legio" evolved into "León", which coincidentally also means "lion".

  • @jorgemanrique743
    @jorgemanrique743 Před 3 lety +3

    aragon son of arathorn

  • @moonbeammimi
    @moonbeammimi Před 3 lety +1

    About La Mancha: Known to the Arabs as Al-Manshah (“Dry Land” or “Wilderness”), the region was an intermediate zone between Christian and Moorish forces during the Middle Ages. (Copied from Britannica.com) 🤷‍♀️

  • @DaisyGeekyTransGirl
    @DaisyGeekyTransGirl Před 3 lety

    0:21 But Regions of Spain redirects there so full circle.

  • @GGSigmar
    @GGSigmar Před 2 lety

    Leon does not come from lion. The connection was made later. The name comes from latin word for 'legion', because roman legions stationed and started a settlement there.

  • @mpanzera
    @mpanzera Před 3 lety

    Yes, mancha does mean "stain" BUT the origin is related to "manga" meaning "sleeve" and in turn a geographical extension. Compare to the French for "English Channel" = La Manche.

  • @lorenzmaut3708
    @lorenzmaut3708 Před 3 lety +1

    You got wrong the name ceuta you said cetua , just a small mistake, good video

  • @mlovecraftr
    @mlovecraftr Před 3 lety

    "Mancha" also has the meaning of VAST, either as an amount of people or area. La Mancha as a historical region was mostly a vast plain.

  • @maximgwiazda344
    @maximgwiazda344 Před 3 lety

    Wait, I always thought that name Aragon is related to the name of it's capital city, Zaragoza/Saragossa. zARAGOza/sARAGOssa. Saragossa is just Roman Caesaraugusta that was Arabized into Saraqusṭa and then Castilianized into Zaragoza. Was I wrong this whole time?

    • @Momo-qs5re
      @Momo-qs5re Před 3 lety

      i don't think it's related to the name of aragon but you were right about the original name of Zaragoza and how it was made by the romans then it was arabized and then castilianized later on but i think it'd be more accurate if you said aragonized because the people of aragon spoke a different dialect to castile at the time.

  • @urquizabr
    @urquizabr Před rokem

    Precisamente, según varias teorías, es de la lengua árabe de la que procede el topónimo "Mancha": así, Manxa o Al-Mansha se traduce como "tierra sin agua", y Manya como "alta planicie" o "lugar elevado", siendo estas teorías las más comunes sobre el origen del topónimo.

  • @KarnodAldhorn
    @KarnodAldhorn Před 3 lety +1

    9:27 Actually Vandals were a germanic tribe that plundered Rome. That's where we get the modern association from.

  • @SergioSovi
    @SergioSovi Před 3 lety

    Extremadura is "beyond the Douro river", not "at the end of the river".. Seeing from the North. In Portugal are similarly named historical regions.

  • @enkelito1
    @enkelito1 Před 3 lety

    let's find out

  • @JFWacK
    @JFWacK Před 3 lety +2

    When you talk about Murcia and say is named after the city you showed a picture of Cartagena, a city in the same region, really old and important but not the capital. I guess somebody is not going to take that well XD.
    Also I think it was worth commenting the possible origin of La Mancha from Arabic "Al-mansha" meaning "dry land", etc.
    There are whole books about the origin of names of places in Spain so, nice try condensing it to a 10 min video.

  • @pays-de-vitae
    @pays-de-vitae Před 8 dny

    Apparently Leon doesn't come from Lion; it actually comes from "Legion"

  • @nenu
    @nenu Před 3 lety

    I would say that the main difference is that autonomies are administrative regions while the regions properly are cultural.
    Like you have 50 states in the US with the regions being New England, South, MidWest, PacificNorthWest... including several states

    • @asherl5902
      @asherl5902 Před 3 lety

      Regions are a former division which is based mainly in the kingdoms that existed before after creating smaller provinces in the XIX century: they could or couldn't correspond to autonomies. For example, Castile and León are 2 different regions and kingdoms, while Cantabria and La Rioja were part of Castile region and kingdom; Madrid, as capital city community, has never been a region nor kingdom itself but part of Toledo Kingdom = "Castile the New One" region, which is mainly present day Castile - La Mancha without a province from Murcia region/kingdom. As you say, when "region" is used today, although may not correspond exactly former regions, it's certainly meaning cultural regions.

    • @nenu
      @nenu Před 3 lety

      @@asherl5902 going back to the previous kingdoms would mean incorporating leonese Extremadura to Leon and Castilian Extremadura (Eastern Caceres) to Castile, as well as having Cantabria and LaRioja in Castile, Albacete together with Murcia....

    • @asherl5902
      @asherl5902 Před 3 lety

      ​@@nenu Yes, more or less. It's complicated. There were the Christian kingdoms which united themselves with marriages and so, and the most common was that these kingdoms were like confederations or federations named "crowns" whose autonomy variated (both between them and with the time) from totally autonomous to only retaining their name as a constituent kingdom... However, not all of these kingdoms survived. By the other way, the Muslim kingdoms were the "taifas": when a Christian king conquered them, he sometimes treated them in the same way (the most large, important, etc), but other new kingdoms were created joining multiple taifas in one territory, or one taifa was anexed in an already extisting kingdom or maybe a particion was made when multiple kings conquered them together. Extremadura, which sometimes was referred as a kingdom but was more like a kind of special (mediaeval) province, has been always a separate region from Leon, although it was part of the Crown of Leon which was part of the Crown of Castile. The Basque Country's provinces are a region since they always had an special status and laws because of their culture, while always part of Castile Kingdom. Cantabria and La Rioja didn't, but they are now atonomous because of culture, their economy and resources, etc. The region of Andalucia formerly didn't include the kingdom of Granada, and although it contained 3 different kingdoms it was always treated a region because of its culture ans so: the other regions were all derived directly form the former kingdoms with one to one correspondence.

    • @nenu
      @nenu Před 3 lety +1

      @@asherl5902 Extremadura was not a Kingdom
      The Extremaduras were the buffer-zone areas between christians and muslims that were south of the Duero river (hence ExtremiDorii, literally 'on the other side of the Duero')
      There was an Aragonese Extremadura, a Castilian Extremadura, a Leonese Extremadura and a Portuguese Extremadura.
      From those, only the spanish region of Extremadura and the portuguese province of Estremadura are the only ones to keep their name
      images.app.goo.gl/9Eo2dfyTSTWWWfbP6

    • @asherl5902
      @asherl5902 Před 3 lety

      ​@@nenu Yes, I know, but the Leonese one was a few times referred as so, as a sucessor of the taifa of Badajoz, if memory don't fails me, maybe with that name (Badajoz). Anyway, kingdom or not, it was always considered a different region of Leon both culturally and by law, where it counted as if it were a different entity.

  • @daddyleon
    @daddyleon Před 3 lety

    0:45 would be nice!

  • @alanjrubin2012
    @alanjrubin2012 Před 3 lety

    Castilla La Mancha doesnt come from the Castillian meaning (stain) but from (most probably) the Arabic name for the region Al-Mansha (meaning dry land)

  • @aaronodonoghue1791
    @aaronodonoghue1791 Před 3 lety

    I used to think "Extremadura" meant "extremely hard" ("extrema" should be obvious, "dura" as in "dura mater" or "durable"), and was wondering why the place would be extremely hard

  • @senor-achopijo3841
    @senor-achopijo3841 Před 7 měsíci

    Sorry, but I have to correct you on one thing: the Kingdom of León's name comes from the Latin word "Legionis", which means legion. After many centuries, the name changed into León and people forgot where the name originally came from, so they assumed it was named after an animal. That is why León's flag has a lion (lion in Spanish just so happens to be "león").

  • @jsolloso
    @jsolloso Před 3 lety +1

    So a couple of points you missed.
    Galicia has it's own language from which descends Portuguese. It was its own Kingdom and from it descend the Royalty of Spain which unified all crowns. It's also the place with the oldest Celtic village in existence and came to prominence by the landing of the Visigoths and it's ruler after the Roman collapse. It also ensures the Christianisation of Spain via Santiago, hence the Cathedral.
    Castilla La Mancha is so named because of the desert occupying vast parts of its geographical output. La Mancha referring to the desert which is a stain upon the otherwise green and mountainous landscape.
    Cataluña is a new region. It was originally part of Aragon and the Catalan language is a derivative of Aragonese and only came to importance in the latter half of the 19th century.
    Navarre was its own Kingdom, one of the original 5 and it was the Basque regions which belonged to it, not the other way around. The Basque language was used in Navarre and neighbouring areas.

    • @sardoniceheleno.7452
      @sardoniceheleno.7452 Před 3 lety

      all you said is correct except the origins of the Catalan language, it's actually in the iberian-occitanian family inside of the romance languages, where it shares place with the occitan language and the Catalan dialects.

    • @jsolloso
      @jsolloso Před 3 lety

      @@sardoniceheleno.7452 No, everything I said is correct INCLUDING what I said about the Catalan language. The language comes from Aragonese, which was the Kingdom the area known as Catalonia belonged to. As a region, Catalonia is quite new, as in no history past the middle 1800s.

    • @jsolloso
      @jsolloso Před 3 lety

      @@sardoniceheleno.7452 The Catalan language belongs to Aragon, there has never been a Catalan entity outside of Aragon or Spain. So the language is Aragonese. Fact.

  • @vincentcleaver1925
    @vincentcleaver1925 Před 3 lety

    The way the north is cropped is annoying; I went found this map-
    www.britannica.com/place/Spain

  • @frankietobarensis5033
    @frankietobarensis5033 Před 3 lety

    Would be better if, la rioja navarra and vascones was one, and leon and castille separated, castille la mancha only called la mancha, and andalus to be divided in vandalusia and granada

  • @mooshinu
    @mooshinu Před 3 lety

    You were incorrect regarding the spelling of Melilla and its etimology, in the Amazigh language the city of "Melilla" actually means "the white one".

  • @jamespyle777
    @jamespyle777 Před 3 lety

    Satellite views of La Mancha are more red than other parts of Spain. Also it has been where much of the cultural mixing happened during the Reconquista.

  • @marcc375
    @marcc375 Před 3 lety +6

    I think you forgot the Balearic Islands.

  • @jonlerones1610
    @jonlerones1610 Před 3 lety

    The kindom of Leon cames from its capital, Leon, an this name cames from the roman city of Legio wich in the middle ages became Leon

  • @89carloom
    @89carloom Před 3 lety

    the j in Spanish is pronounced as the h in have.

  • @SteveFrench_420
    @SteveFrench_420 Před rokem

    3:12 What'd you just call me?!!!!! Ohhhh, Kant, with an "A". Sorry. My bad.

  • @jasonbailey9139
    @jasonbailey9139 Před 3 lety

    Sad that you used a cute little dog for the Canary Islands. Look up canarian mastiff and get a look at the huge dogs they are! Thanks for another fun video.

  • @anthonymartinez509
    @anthonymartinez509 Před 3 lety +2

    The castilla la mancha region is named so because of how flat it is and such, but I am no linguist so I don't know for sure, great vid!
    edit: As for the balearic islands' name it comes from the weapon used by the original settlers of the island who used a traditional sling called a "fona" in catalonian and "honda" in spanish

  • @F1990T
    @F1990T Před 3 lety

    Far as we know in spain, the arab spoken in al-andalus period was heavly influenced by the hispanian dialects of latin (roman language) and germanic languages like visigothic (western goths) and the suevian (from swabia, it was the name of the lands that today are parts of switzerland and of the german province of baden-wurttenberg), al-andalus most probably is the "corruption" of the word of the latin/roman name of the german tribe known as "Vandalii", i.e Vandals, this because the time before the arabs conquered what is today the magreb, (north africa), there was the remanents of a post-roman germanic kingdom build by the vandals in north africa, Vandals ravaged Italy, crossed the mediterranean sea and conquered the old roman provinces of africa, they build their kingdom there, Sicily, Sardinia, Tunisia, north Libya and northern Algeria was their territory, they used carthage as capital, centuries later, as arabs conquered north africa from the byzantines, they knew that the place was one ruled by an european tribe, different than romans, a realm that was destroyed by the byzantines "east romans", emperor justinian (who ruled right in the century before the rise of the arabs), ordered the famous general belisarius to destroy the vandal kingdom, after their conquest, arabs must have suspected that the germanic tribes in spain, the goths, were the same as the vandals, so, after they conquered 3/4 of spain, they adapted the name in their language as Al-Andalus, the "vandal land", "land of the vandals".

  • @nenu
    @nenu Před 3 lety

    La Mancha comes from arabic "Al-Manya", meaning high platoo

    • @Momo-qs5re
      @Momo-qs5re Před 3 lety

      i speak arabic and i don't know what "Al-Manya" means, plateau in arabic means "hathba".
      But It is thought that La Mancha comes from the word "Al Mansha'a" in arabic which means the birthplace or the Enterprise

    • @nenu
      @nenu Před 3 lety

      @@Momo-qs5re sorry, not "al-manya" but "

    • @Momo-qs5re
      @Momo-qs5re Před 3 lety

      @@nenu but?

  • @marcc375
    @marcc375 Před 3 lety +9

    Cantabria - Canterbury; Murcia - Mercia? I'm starting to see a pattern here. Haha

  • @TotoDG
    @TotoDG Před 3 lety +6

    Video Idea: How did Simpsons characters get their names?

  • @mikehusanj1704
    @mikehusanj1704 Před 3 lety +7

    The Canary Islands: birds named after the island, island named after dogs : god forbid somebody brings a cat to the island🐶🐱🐥

  • @timomastosalo
    @timomastosalo Před 3 lety

    Cantabria could have the meaning of 'Cornerland' - namely in the ancient time, when the Celts gave the name, it would have been a corner towards the Basqueland. There was no Spain yet . the Celts gave names from their own perspective. That would still leave about the end, the -br..ia. Well, aber means a river delta in Welsh, so a 'Corner of (the) Delta' would maje some sence, for people by a Delta in Cantabria, aware that tehy are near the Basqueland. Yet another Celtic word is bri, brin for a hill. So 'Hill Corner, Hill Region' would work as well.

    • @timomastosalo
      @timomastosalo Před 3 lety

      I'd say Vascon...es, and the Basque are just results of the Romans not being able to say Euskaldunak, Euskarra. That Eusk- turned to Vasc-, I think. Just because languages do this, when they find something difficult to pronounce in the other languages. Like German ich (I, me) is said 'ick, ish' by the English speakers before they learn the -ch sound of German. Though it's in the Celtuc languages of the British Isles - and even some northern English say words like lock as if the Scottish 'loch'.

    • @timomastosalo
      @timomastosalo Před 3 lety

      Aragon may have a lot to do with the certain King of Gondor in the Niddle Earth - namely Tolkien borrowed many words from various languages almost without a change - like Theoden is a name from Anglo-Saxon or Old English. So I think Aragón and Aragorn may be related - especially as a word play, becaure when the English don't pronounce the R before the N, they say the name pretty much like the region of Spain should be said. Tolkien's texts are full of these kinds of jests, puns or confessions of his love of words (depends how you take them). I know, as a Finn I've found many Finnish words in Quenya, one of his Elven languages. The words have been changed by their meaning, often times - but sometimes just slightly, or a few times not really at all.

  • @SalvadorVieyra
    @SalvadorVieyra Před 3 lety +1

    King of gondor and arnor

  • @markaguzmanartist630
    @markaguzmanartist630 Před 2 lety

    Galicia where populated by celts , asturias is also celtic and arian goth s the expanded in that aria asturias is simular to austria , galicia is also found in the east russia galician galic origin of the gual by the celtic Basques were like celts mixed from the north half a million end up in france and in northorn spain Bascos , Catalunia was latin origin by the romans and part from the goth people germanic visagoths , also franks populated , by german arian goths later changed to the franks , spain is history celts greeks romans phocians basques vandals , goths visagoths franks part goths slavs also goths jews arabs moors later the cristians and other migrants from northern ueropeans french austrians , italians lately alot of polish ,

  • @aribari2434
    @aribari2434 Před 3 lety +1

    yes, off the coast of africa! cus africa is one large country right