We are living in a Global family, conquering
distance and continents and living beyond our own locus of cultural heritage.
We keep moving from place to place, country to country and even continents to
continents. With all respect to our own heritage and practices we want to live
in far off
places, far removed from India and practice
our obligations to our religious, cultural and language requirements. Such
requirements are more personal and do not get affected by living as an alien in
a different nation. However, when we interact with the persons of the nation we
live in and have business or professional dealings with them we have to have a
different identity which has to be in consonance with the most popularly
followed format. In this process it has become necessary to have
our names to be selected to go in consonance
with the globally practiced version. Sadly enough we do not have our names in
any format. Leaving alone the persons of the older generation, even the persons
of the younger generation who spend a lot of time scrolling through the web and
searching through many books in Sanskrit, Tamil etc. do not select a full name
for their children that conforms to the format.
The need for different names for any individual
comes from the need to identify the person more clearly and without ambiguity.
In the globally recognized format there are three names for every
individual—the First Name, the Family or surname or Last Name and the Middle
Name (also
called the middle initial). If the British
call it Surname, the Americans prefer to call it Last Name, though both refer
to the same and mean the same. These last names were historically based on occupation,
place, geography, social status, honorifics given by the state etc. In the
olden days we used to have names like Iyer, Iyengar, Chettiar, Naidu etc.
though they referred to a particular caste/clan and not necessarily a family.
That would have sufficed the need for a Surname. At some point of time in our
history we decided to cut and throw it due to political demand. The need for a separate
family name is still there and will still be there.
Some of us do a quick‐fix
to sort out the problem. The tendency is to expand the initial/s and call it
the Last Name. In a majority of the cases the initial represents the name of
the father of the individual (if with one initial). All is well as long as the
individual continues to be unmarried. Once he/she gets married, the spouse (to
mean the wife here) has to change her Last Name to go with that of her
husband’s Last name. This brings in a very strange and delicate situation,
looking back at the Last name of the lady in the Indian context. Whereas the
Last name may refer to the family in a foreign country, in our Indian context
it refers to her husband. How strange will it be if the father‐in
law is synonymous with the husband? As though not done with it, the individual
is all the time referred in the name of his father. How odd will it be when the
son is addressed in the name of his father, while in the company of his father!
Needless to say that we have to move with
the way the world moves when we move around it. We have to find a solution to
sort out the issue and have names to ourselves and our progeny to identify
fully with the norms followed everywhere. This note may be considered to open
up a forum to put in various views to find a unique solution which when
finalized will conform to the international norm, at the same time preserving
our own cultural identity. One suggestion is to revert back to Iyer, Iyengar
etc. for the Last name but with its own consequences in India throwing the
individuals in to utter disadvantage under the existing political opportunism
and turmoil.
One immediate objection for this change may
be the hassle of going through the legal formalities of making a notorized
affidavit and publishing the ‘name change’ through newspaper etc. Considering
the long‐term advantage it is
worth going through the exercise once in life time. Needlessto say that ladies
have to do it after the marriage and why not men.
It is high time to think on this issue and
get consensus among the family members.
Present methodology of
mentioning names.
A personal name is the proper name
identifying an individual person,
and today usually comprises a given name bestowed at birth or
at a young age plus a surname. It is nearly universal for a human to have a name; the rare exceptions
occur in the cases of mentally disturbed parents, feral children
growing up in isolation, or infants orphaned by natural disaster of whom no
written record survives. The Convention on the Rights of the Child
specifies that a child has the right from birth to a name.
Naming
conventions are strongly influenced by culture,
with some cultures being more flexible on naming than others. However, for all
cultures where historical records are available, the naming rules are known to
change over time.
Given name.
A given name is a personal name that specifies and differentiates between members
of a group of individuals, especially in a family, all of whose members usually
share the same family name (surname).
A given name is a name given to a person, as opposed to an inherited one such as
a family name. In most European countries and in countries that
have cultures predominantly influenced by Europe (such as individuals with
European heredity who populate North and South America, Australia, New Zealand,
etc.), the given name usually comes before the family name (though generally
not in lists and catalogs), and so is known as a forename or first name. But in many cultures of the world — such as that
of Hungary, various cultures in Africa and most cultures in East Asia (e.g.
China, Japan, Korea and Vietnam) — given names traditionally come after the
family name. In East Asia, even part of the given name may be shared among all
members of a given generation in a family and the family's extensions, to
differentiate those generations from other generations.
Under the common Western naming convention, people
generally have one or more forenames (either given or acquired). If more than
one, there is usually a main forename (for everyday use) and one or more
supplementary forenames. But sometimes two or more carry equal weight. Beyond
the fact that forenames come before the surname there is no particular ordering rule. Often the
main forename is at the beginning, resulting in a first name and one or more middle names, but other arrangements are quite common.
Given names are often used in a familiar and
friendly manner in informal situations. In more formal situations the surname
is used instead, unless it is necessary to distinguish between people with the
same surname. The idiom "on a first-name basis" (or "on
first-name terms") alludes to the fact that using a person's given name
betokens familiarity.
Legality
A child's given name or names are usually assigned
around the time of birth. In most jurisdictions, the name at birth is a matter of public record, inscribed on the birth
certificate or
equivalent. In some jurisdictions, mainly civil-law jurisdictions such as France, Quebec, the Netherlands or Germany, the functionary whose
job it is to record acts of birth may act to prevent parents from giving the
child a name that may cause him or her harm (in France, by referring the case
to a local judge). Even spell-checking of the name is done.
Persons born in one country who immigrate to another with different naming conventions may
have their names legally changed accordingly.[ If the name is not
assigned at birth it may be assigned at a naming
ceremony with families and friends attending.
In 1991, in protest of Swedish naming laws, two
parents attempted to name their child Brfxxccxxmnpcccclllmmnprxvclmnckssqlbb11116, claiming
that it was "a pregnant, expressionistic development that we see as an
artistic creation.".
Indian names
Indian family
names are based on a variety of systems and naming conventions, which
vary from region to region. Names are also influenced by religion and caste and may come from religion or epics. India's population speaks a wide variety of languages and nearly every major religion in the world has a following in India. This variety
makes for subtle, often confusing, differences in names and naming styles. For
example, the concept of a family name did not exist widely in Tamil Nadu.
For many Indians, their birth name is different
from their official name; the birth name starts with a letter auspicious on the
basis of the person's horoscope. Some children are given one name (a given
name). In communities that don't use family names, the third name can be a
god's name, or the grandfather's or grandmother's name, depending on the sex of
the child. Many children are given two names sometimes as a part of religious
teaching, and "Velanati" and "Telaganya" indicate the ancestral
places of their origin. These are used for sub caste identification and not
necessarily used routinely as part of a person's official name or daily use
name.
Due to caste-based discrimination or to be
caste-neutral, many people started adopting generic last names such as Kumar. Film
stars such as Rajkumar (Kannada Film legend), Dilip Kumar, Manoj Kumar and, more recently, Akshay Kumar have adopted Kumar as their last names for
marketing reasons. As Kumar became too common, people adopted names such as
Ranjan and Anand as their surnames.
Some English occupational nouns have also passed
into surname usage, with surnames such as Engineer. Rajesh Pilot, an Indian
ex-minister, adopted his surname after a stint in theIndian Air
Force.
Few people, in hundreds, have started to name their
children after international personalities. Most of the time, the surname is
used as a first name, like Einstein, Churchill, Kennedy,Beethoven, Shakespeare etc., and tend to denote the parents' political
affiliations. This practice is particularly prevalent in Goa and Tamil Nadu. Examples
of names like these are Churchill and his
brothers, Roosevelt B. Alemao and Kennedy B. Alemao from Goa and M.K. Stalin and Napoleon
Einstein from Tamil Nadu. As in Western societies, parents
are beginning to experiment with uncommon names, or are using words that aren't
usually considered names, like Proton Padmanabhan, Alpha Jyothis and Omega
Jyothis, as well asNeon and Iodine. Hundreds of people are using these names in
India.
Last names in South India:
Andhra Pradesh - Language spoken - Telugu
Sowmya
Barlapudi, Vokshani Priya Sigireddi , Sirugudi, Chandamalla, Mamuduri, Kodhati,
Jakkala, Pillarishetty, Appani, Gayam, Jasti, Vemulapalli, Anumula, Asuri,
Nallanchakravarthula, Alaparthi, Gunti,Danaboyina, Paila ,Ethrouthu, Boini,
Ankem, Karnati, Kalluri, Medam, Ginjupalli, Kavuri, Kondragunta, Thupalli,
Raavi, Mandava, Chiguluri, Mukkamala, Musunuri, Gurram, Yarlagadda, Anantaneni,
Ponna, Gollapinni, Anumolu, Bulusu, Bhagavatula, Chaganti, Chaparala,
Cherukuri,Garudadri, Mullapudi, Gollapudi,Tanikella, kovelamudi,
Sripada, Vempati, Nutulapati,Nomula, Davuluri,Vemuri, allu, alluri,
Tunuguntla,Thanneeru,Lakamalla,Thalari,Marri,Pati,Akula,Banoth,Meka,Ramavath,chinthamalla
Munnangi, Mamidala, Mandaloju, Sreegiri, Srishti, Vundavalli, Ragampudi,
Murthy, Prasad, Mutyala, Pinnamaneni, Pendyala, Panuganti, Ponnala, Galli,
Chebrolu, Nidumolu, Gundapaneni, Malladi, Achanta, Yellapragada,
Akkineni,Gandhamaneni,BellamKonda,Kakumani, Madanu, Goud, Raju, Reddy, Rao,
Ray, Rai Gunda, Gupta, Charugundla, Chowdary,tulabandu, Vakalapudi, Sastri,
Yadav, Sharma, Thota, Munnur Kaapu, Naidu, Naayak, Maadiga, Mudiraj,
Padmashali, Prasad,Eguri, Pasala, Rajendra Prasad, Kumar, Babu, Sheikh,
Sridhar, Abdul, Mohammed, Rebbapragada ,Chagantipati, Gorthi, Damarsingh,
Kshirsagar
Commonly found middle names are naga, tirumala, venkata, subramanya,
Kumar, reddy, rama etc.
Karnataka -
Languages spoken - Kannada/Tulu//Konkani/Marathi
Anchan/Hullathi/Malgi, Jammihal, Srividyadhare Kateel, Savitha,
Chandrashekara, Poojari or Poojary, Kotian,Suvarna, Salian, Kunder,
Kukian, Karkera, Baily, Shrian, Naik, Nairi, Papanashi, Bhadranavar, Chetti,
Hukkeri, Jamakhandi, Sonnad, Sannakki, Kanthi, Sinnur, Sukali, Kulkarni,
Patil, Putsetra, Mayachari, Sangati, Chikkatumbal, Halemani, Hosamani,
Dharawadkar, Doddamni, Jadhav, Madivalar, Hiremath, Jituri, Benakannakarvar,
Torath, Talwari, Jakkannavar, Kogilagaddi, Ponarkaar, Noorkhan, Kodhanch,
Bellubbli, Lohar, Basidoni, Kabadagi, Jalageri, Mallammanavar, Giddananavar,
Menashinakayi, Ullagaddi, Bhajentri, Nadkarni, Nadig, Nadgir, Rao, Nayak,
Gaonkar, Rai, Shetty, Heggade, Alva, Dhore, Raya, Gondkar, Huded, Datanal,
Kallanagowdar, Moily, Marigodar, Wali, Walishettar, Dundur, Dixit, Dasar,
Kumbar, Jolad, Hoskeri, Hubli, Uppin, Bapakar, Badni, Badanikai, Hanchinal,
Karanth, Holla, Aithal, Athani, Turamri, Gourishetty, Hurkadli, Akki, Kalal,
Chatnis, Khatawakar, Bargi, Kadni, Kabboor, Reddy, Yadav, Dasegouda,
Bhandarkar, Padki, Dasannanavar, Simi, Belgavi, Naravatte, Navalagi, Bellad,
Malagi, Shettar, Goudar, Gowda, Hegde, Udupa, Handhe, Shasthri, Kamath,
Shanbhag, Shanubhogue, Murthy, Aithal, Hebbar,Bangera, Shenoy, Tantry, Pai,
Upadhya, Prabhu, Kini, Bijapur, Veerapur, Devarmani, Gangannavar, Kattimani,
Math, Tatpatti, Akkur, Jambagi, Khavatekar, Beedi, Zalaki, Hallur, Negalur,
Hondadakatti, Itagi, Koluvailu, Hosagrahara, Naregal, Paramshetti, Kanthi, Iyengar,
Padukone, Lingayat Setty, Pandit, Puthran, Nayaka, Anna, Swami, Eshwar,
Bahudur, Deshpande, Wodeyar, Prasad, Rao, Sheshadri, Shet, Raikar, Revenkar,
Vernekar, Hosmath, Anvekar, Bargali, Barigali, Kadakol, Godkhindi, Panchamukhi,
Kudva, Radhakrishna, Hampannavar
Kerala - Language spoken -
Malayalam
Abhijath, Achari, Adikal, Adiyodi,
Alex, Abraham, Akkara, Anthony, Anto, Asaan, Alapatt, Bhattathiri, Chakyar, Chacko,Channar, Chazhukaran, Chekavan, Chekavar,
Chovan, Eradi,Ezhuthachan, Ilayath, Jiju, Kaimal, Kani, Kanikkar Kartha,Konikara, Kurukkal, Kurup, Kutty, Kunju, Marar, Menon, Moosad, Moothan,
Menachery, Nair, Nambeesan, Nambi, Nambiar,Namputiri, Nayanar, Nayar, Nedungadi, Palatty,
Pandala, Panikkar,
Payankan, Pillai, Pisharadi, Porathur, Pothuval,
Pulikkottil,Pulickal, Samoothiri, Sharma, Thampi, Unni, Unnithan,
Unnithiri, Vaidyan, Vaidyar, Valiathan,
valiyaveetil, Valodi, Variar,Varma.
Tamil Nadu -
Language spoken - Tamil
Achari, Chettiar, Fernandes, Gounder, Iyengar, Iyer, Udayar, Moopanar,
Kuyavar, Kudumban, Lebbai, Maraikayar, Mudaliar, Nadar, Naicker, Pillai,
Prabakar, Poobalarayar, Rowther, Thevar, Vellalar, Vishwakarma, Ambalakarar, Thondaiman, Adigaman,Malayaman, Paluvettaraiyar Vallavaraiyar,
Sethurayar, Thanjaraayar, kurusar, Pallavaraayar, Vandayar, Etrandaar,
Vaanavaraayar, Servai, Thevar, Soma Naicker, Muniyarayar, Kallathil Venrar,
Nattar, Manrayar, Cholagar, Chozhangaraayar, Kandiyar, Mazhavaraayar,
Srinivasan, Subramaniam, Ramachandran, Chari, Venkatraman, Chandrasekar,
Venkatramanan, Raman, Krishnamurthi, Raja.
For a long time,
South Indians had a simple naming system. Historically, everyone was given a
single name, which was chosen on the basis of one of three possible ways:
§ The name
of their village/town, e.g. Singri
(singiri), Bangalore, Udyavara, Chitti, Kular, Chavali, Inkollu,
Hattiangdi, Janaswamy, Hubli, Kokradi, Mangalore, etc.
§ Their
family/clan name, e.g. Pulithevar, Sahonta
§ Caste
name, eg. Iyer, Rao, Nair
Karnataka
In Karnataka, the naming convention is given name, father's name (Middle
name), last name (Can reflect Sir name, family name, place, occupation
etc.). manjunatha,
Muralidhar, Venkatesha, Raghava, Radha Krishna Murthy, Raghavendra,
Ramesh,B.Jayappa, Shayle mallappa, K mallappa, Kantharajappa Vishwanath are
some common names for men. For women names such as Bhagya, Bhagyalakshmi,
Lakshmi, Shylaja, Manasa, Meera, Shanthala, Seeta, Uma, Gayathri,Chaitra are
all common names. It is customary for wife to take on husband's surname or last
name, to reflect symbolic change in them moving out of father's house and
becoming part of the husband's family. Man is the head of the household.
In villages and away from city sometimes initials precede a given name.
For example, Kagodu Bairappa Timmappa (village, father,
given name). Sometimes only village name precedes their given name. Some names
explicitly mention affiliation to a family. For example, Pasharara Kolli (Kolli
of Pashara family), Naigodara Kanni (Kanni of Naigod family).
Kerala
In Kerala, the standard procedure was Family name-Given name-Caste/title
name (if applicable). Therefore Kannoth Karunakaran Maarar,
can interpreted as Karunakaran of the Maarar caste from the Kannoth family.
Since Kerala was a feudal society before the mid-20th century, most Keralites
belong to a clan, unlike other parts of South India. Those who do not belong to
a caste that received a title, such as fisherment, and labourers would simply
have their family name followed by their given name, eg. Vayilparambu
Manoharan. Today, the traditional format of naming has started to change and
the father's first name is sometimes used as a last name, in accordance with
other South Indian communities. Among Christians in Kerala, it is a common
practice to have a second given name (middle name) which is the baptismal name,
usually the first name of a grandparent or godparent, like Roshni Mary George
and Anoop Antony Philip. some examples: yogeshwar nair
Tamil
Many South Indians use the name of their ancestral hometown, or the
family profession as the last name or family name. In this case sometimes the
surname is placed before the given name. Some Tamil people have both a village
name and a caste name as part of their name, for instance Madurai Mani
Iyer. Here, Madurai is
a town and Iyer is
a caste. Many Keralites especially Syrian Christians use as the
"tharavaad", a description of their ancestral home. Names like Pramod
Perumparambil and Paul Chemmanoor fall under this category.
There is also widespread usage of a patronymic: use of
the father's given name as the second name. This means that the given name of
one generation becomes the second name of the next. In many cases, this second
name is used as an initial and the given name may appear like a second name.
For example a name like "Ajith Abraham" means "Ajith son of
Abraham". If Ajith then has a son named Ashvin, then his name would be
Ashvin Ajith.
It is common for Tamil women to adopt their husband's given name as a
second name. Sunitha Gopalan (Sunitha daughter of Gopalan) might change her
name to Sunitha Rajiv (Sunitha wife of Rajiv) after marriage. Some South
Indians use an inverted patronym. For example, Chitra Visweswaran is a dancer
whose last name is either a patronym or the given name of her husband. More
common among women, the inverted patronym is also adopted by people migrating
West who want to be called by their given names without having to explain
Indian naming conventions. The given names of their fathers or husbands become
their family names.
Initials
In Western English-speaking societies, when there are two people with
the same name, for example, Robert Jones and Robert Smith, in an elementary
school class, they may be referred to as Robert J. and Robert S. respectively
to avoid confusion. But two Ramans in South India have just the one name each.
So the names of their fathers are used as initials instead of a surname. Raman,
son of Gopal, would be G. Raman, and Raman, son of Dinesh, D. Raman. This led
to the initial system, mostly followed in South India. Most schools
automatically add the initials upon enrollment.
In some parts of Tamil Nadu, traditional family names have recently been
abandoned in favour of a father's/husband's given name as a family name. The
use of a father's/husband's given name as a family name is in vogue. These
names are also used as initials. School and college records would have the
names with initials as given below.
§ "S.
Janaki" - the family name initial and then the given name.
§ "S.
Janaki" might also be written as "Janaki Sridar" in legal
documents.
Legal documents such as passports will have the last name fully
expanded, instead of initials. Other legal documents such as property deeds
will have any of these name formats with the mention of father's
/grandfather's/husband's given name and/or village/town/city name. Mandating expansion
of initials in passport and multinational companies that are influenced by
western standards is a big source of confusion in South India. For example, a
letter for Raja Gopala Varma, son of Krishna Kumar, who is usually referred as
"K. Raja Gopala Varma", might be addressed incorrectly to
"Krishna Kumar Raja Gopala Varma".
Men's names are usually prefixed with initials as mentioned before. Some
men used to omit the initial, adding the father's given name in the end.
However, this isn't a legal name and won't change their name in official
records. For example, both P. Chidambaram and Chidambaram
Palaniyappan are valid; however the latter form is not legally used.
Generally, the initials are omitted, and father's name is suffixed to shorten a
name, for example, G. Raja Ravi Varma, son of M. Gopal Krishnan, becomes Raja
Gopal.
For women, the system of initials is slightly different. Before
marriage, a girl uses her father's initial, but after marriage, she may choose
to use her husband's initial. Of late the trend has changed and many women,
especially those employed, do not change the initials, but continue with their
father's initials. This is mainly for convenience, since school degree and
career papers have the woman's father's initials on them. Changing a name
legally is a cumbersome procedure, including announcing the proposed change in
a newspaper and getting it published in an official gazette. So the modern
trend is to add the husband's name at the end, like some Western women who add
their husband's name with a hyphen.
People who do not understand the South Indian naming protocol sometimes
expand the initials in an incorrect manner. For example, the name P.
Chidambaram, tends to be expanded to Palaniyappan Chidambaram, which is
incorrect in the sense that it implies that the person's given name is
"Palaniyappan", and the family name is "Chidambaram". In
fact, the person's only name is "Chidambaram", with an initial of
"P". Also if the name is Srishti Venkata Sesha Phaneendra, it may be
written as S.V.S.Phaneendra with three initials.Other such famous
misrepresentations include the chess grandmaster, V. Anand (wrongly expanded as
Vishwanathan Anand); cricketer, L. Sivaramakrishnan (Laxman is his father's
name); and the freedom fighter and statesman, C. Rajagopalachari (often cited as Chakravarty Rajagopalachari).
On the other hand, north India media refers to Dr. Anbumani
Ramadoss (son of Dr. Ramadoss) often simply as Dr Ramadoss,
which again is incorrect as Ramadoss is his father's name and not his name.
The involvement of Justice Party (1926 onwards) and the other Dravidian
parties in the start of Independent India had contributed much to the
confusion. For instance, a person by name Rajaram Iyer used to get advantage in
schools, colleges, jobs etc. for being an Iyer. Alternatively, a person may not
like to declare his /her caste name to avoid being identified. "Why should
a person get advantage or disadvantage just by declaring his / her
caste?". This was the primary question raised by the Dravidian ideology.
For instance, a Rajaram Mudaliar may not get the same treatment as a Rajaram
Nadar in a public office. Moreover, a Rajaram without any surname/castename
will be put in confusion. This led to the inclusion of Father's name as
initial. In certain vulgar terms, in some parts of Tamil Nadu it used to be
referred like this. "We are born to Fathers, and not to Castes".
Surnames or family names
1. Invented
family names such as that of Rajesh Pilot.
2. The
English last name of Anglo-Indians - descendants of British and Indian parents.
3. Portuguese-Goan
last names, such as Fernandes.
4. Arabic
surnames of Muslims with ancestors converted to Islam by Arabs and Muslims of
mixed Arab and Indian descent.
Kannada names
Kannada names
might include place names, clan/title/caste names, father's names along with
person's own given name. The rules generally followed when combinations of the
names used; Some times they prefix and suffix as surname and middle name will
be given name.
§ The place
name should always come first.
e.g. Kadidal Manjappa, where Kadidal is place name and Manjappa is
person's given name.
§ Father's
name should always come second.
e.g. Kuppalli
Venkatappa Puttappa, where Kuppalli is place name, Venkatappa is
father's name and Puttappa is person's given name.
§ Initials
from father's Name and Place name
e.g. Adnoor Bheemappa Narendra,
where Adnoor is place name, Bheemappa is father's name and Narendra is person's
given name. Adnoor and Bheemappa can be initialled resulting in the name
"A. B. Narendra".
e.g. Kundapur Varun Shenoy, Kundapur is
place name, Varun is person's given name and Shenoy is
the surname. e.g. Satish Ramanath Hegde, Satish is person's given name,
Ramanath is father's name and Hegde is the title. e.g. Satish Gowda
§ Having
two prefix and suffix as the surname and the middle name as given name. For
example Doddamane Ramakrishna
Hegde.
§ Rare
cases of ancestral house names can also be found, and they follow the rule for
place names.
However, if a person wants to go by only his/her given name, there is a
tendency in official circles to forcibly add extra names (generally, the place
names). Sometimes the surname depends on the work that person does.
Malayali (Kerala) names
Most Keralites have a family name. Most of the family names are of
obscure origin, but many have geographical origins – e.g., Vadakkedath (from
the North), Puthenveetil (from the new house)etc. Traditionally the full names
followed one of three patterns:
1. Family name followed by Given name followed usually by the caste name
or title. This was the common pattern (for men and women) among the upper-caste
Hindus, especially of Malabar and Cochin. Examples: Mani Madhava Chakyar (Mani is the family name or tharavad name,
Madhava(n) is the given name and Chakyar is
the caste name), Vallathol Narayana Menon (Vallathol
is the family name or tharavad name, Narayana(n) is the given name and Menon is
the caste name), Olappamanna Subramanian Nambudiri, Erambala
Krishnan Nayanar, etc. Sometimes the caste name/title was omitted,
e.g., Kannoth Karunakaran (where the caste name
Marar has been omitted). In the case of women the caste name/title was,
traditionally, usually different, for example "Amma" was used for
"Nair", "Andarjjanam" was used for "Nampoothiri",
"Varyasyar" for "Varyar", "Nangyar" for
"Nambiar" "Kunjamma" for
"Valiathan/Unnithan/Kartha" etc. (see the Singh/Kaur convention in Punjab),
e.g., Nalappat Balamani Amma whose brother was
Nalappat Narayana Menon and Savithri Andarjjanam (A renowned author). Quite
often the family name will have more than one part to it, e.g., Elankulam Manakkal Sankaran Namboodiripad, Madathil Thekkepaattu Vasudevan Nair, etc. The
family name is usually initialled, the given name is sometimes initialled
(never when there is no caste name following) and the caste name (if present)
is never initialled. This is completely arbitrary. So we have as common
forms Vallathol Narayana Menon, C. Achutha Menon, E K Nayanar and P. Bhaskaran (here
Bhaskaran is the given name; the caste name, Nair in this case, has been
omitted). In the Nair caste, using the maternal family name at the beginning is
also common. e.g. Maythil Radhakrishnan, who is better known
by his family name Maythil.
2. Family name followed by Father's given name followed by Given name.
This is common among the rest of the population. For example most traditional
Christian names followed this pattern. Usually the Family name and Father name
were initialled. In case of (Hindu) women "Amma" was frequently used
(as in the previous case). Examples include K M Mani, K G
George, V S Achuthanandan, K R Gowri Amma. Many
Palakkad Iyers (Kerala Iyers) use an adaptation of this convention by replacing
the Family Name with the name of the "gramam" (village). Example:
Tirunellai Narayanaiyer Seshan (T N Seshan), where Tirunellai would be the village
name, Narayanaiyer is the Father's given name and Seshan is the given name; or
Guruvayoor Shankaranarayanan Lalitha abbreviated as G. S. Lalitha.
3. Given Name followed by Title. This is common particularly among
Syrian Christians in the old central Travancore area, where the king (Maharaja)
or the local ruler (Raja or Thampuran) used to assign some titles to select
families. Examples include Varghese Vaidyan(Vaidyan), Fr. Geevarghese Panicker
(Panicker), Chacko Muthalaly (Muthalaly), Avira Tharakan (Tharakan), Varkey
Vallikappen (Vallikappen) etc.
4. Given Name followed by Father's name as surname and the Initial taken
from Mother's name. This is a common trend nowadays where both the mother's and
father's names are found with the given Name. For example, L. Athira Krishna.
Here the Mother's name 'Leela' finds mention in the initial and father's name
'Krishna' is taken as surname.
5. Much of these traditional naming patterns have now disappeared. The
family names are usually not included nowadays (this can probably be attributed
to the decline of the joint families or tharavads). The most common patterns
nowadays is to have given names, followed by the father's given name
(patronymic, e.g. Sunil Narayanan or Anil Varghese) or caste name (e.g. Anup Nair).
It is also not uncommon for the village of origin to be use in lieu of the
family name, especially in South Kerala, e.g. Kavalam Narayana Panicker, where
Kavalam is a village in Alapuzha district.
It should be observed that many Christian names such as Varghese
(Ghevarghese) is of Aramaic/Syrian origin.
Tamil names
Many people from the southern states of Tamil Nadu and Kerala do not use
any formal surnames, though most might have one. This is because traditionally
the surnames refer to their cast, and as a way to ensure that their names are
cast-neutral, their surnames are completely dropped. Therefore, in practice,
people use either the father's name or initial as a substitute for the surname.
Initials, when used, can be placed either before or after their given name. For
example; G. Venktaesan, Venkatesan G, or Venkatesan Govindarajan, are different
ways in which a person with a given name Venkatesan, whose father's given name
is Govindarajan can refer to himself.
Malaysian Indian (Tamil) names
Most ethnic Indians (mostly Tamils) in Malaysia trace their ancestral
origin to South India. In Malaysia, the general naming format for Indians is X
son of Y or X daughter of Y. The term 'son of' is ANAK LELAKI (abbreviated to
A/L in ID documents) in the Malay language and the term 'daughter of' is ANAK
PEREMPUAN (abbreviated to A/P in ID documents).
For example, Murugan the son of Vellupillai would appear as MURUGAN A/L
VELLUPILLAI in Malaysian ID Card (MyKad) in the name field and the Malaysian
Passport.
Using the example above, MURUGAN A/L VELLUPILLAI would also arrange his
name in such a way that his father's name become his initial and his given name
appears to be his Surname/ Last Name: V. MURUGAN. This practice is similar to
the name format of the famous South Indian writer R. K. Narayan (R - Place of
Origin: RASIPURAM, K - Father's Name: KRISHNASWAMI). Since most Malaysian
Indians are today born in Malaysia, usually only the father's name appears as
the initials.
However an increasing number of Malaysian Indians are migrating to the
West, and they have begun using their father's name as the Last Name to avoid
confusion. Therefore, Murugan the son of Vellupillai would simply go as MURUGAN
VELLUPILLAI or M. VELLUPILLAI in the West.
Singaporean Indian (Tamil) names
In the British colonial days, male Indian ( mostly Tamils ) names would
employ the connective term S/O (son of) and female Indian names D/O (daughter
of) respectively, and these terms are still in common use in Singapore.
Telugu names
The family names of Telugu people precede the given name and are mostly
abbreviated. For example, the name Kambham Nagarjuna Reddy would be abbreviated
as K.N.Reddy. In this name Nagarjuna Reddy is the given name, and Kambham would
be the family name (surname). Some of the people who belong to a particular
Reddy caste include the caste names in their names, especially "NAIDU", Chowdary,
Shetty, Goud or Mudraj. For example, Vijay Reddy, Hari
Chowdary, Devender Goud. In general, if the name of a person in Western format
was Vijay Reddy Kandi (given name, second given name and family name), then the
name in Telugu-speaking areas would be written as K. Vijay Reddy.there are same
surnames like "lankala" to many castes, in yadav caste lankala
veeraiah, in reddy caste lankala deepak reddy like this in Andhra Pradesh.
Family names of Telugu people are supposed to be the name of the village
or area their ancestors came from. Sometimes the family name can be the same
for people belonging to different castes. For example Nandumuri Taraka Ramarao
could be abbreviated as N.T.RamaRao. Taraka RamaRao is the given name and
probably Nandumuru (a village in Krishna) is the ancestral village of N.T.R.
Sometimes the family name can be same as human body part such as Boddu
(umbilicus), Lingam (male genitalia) etc. However, there is always spiritual
meaning associated for those names. In spiritual sense, Boddu means center of
origin of universe, Lingam means Lord Shiva.
Family name or last name
A family name (in
Western contexts often referred to as a last name) is a
type of surname and part
of a person's name indicating
the family to which the person belongs. The use of family names is widespread
in cultures around the world. Each culture has its own rules as to how these
names are applied and used.
In India
India is a country with numerous distinct cultural and linguistic
groups. Thus, Indian surnames, where formalized, fall into seven general types.
Many people from the southern states of Tamil Nadu and Kerala do not use any
formal surnames, though most have one. In spite of hiding their caste
discrimination, Tamil people do not use their family or caste names. They use
initials in front of their names (example J. John Vimalraj) instead. The
initial J stands for the father's name John Peter, though they have a last name
such as Muthaliyar or Kounder.
In Northern India, for most of the people, their family name comes after
the given names, whereas in Southern India, the given names come after the
family name.
Surnames are based on:
§ Patronymics
and ancestry, whereby the father's name or an ancestor's given name is used in
its original form or in a derived form (e.g. Aggarwal or
Agrawal or Agrawala derived from the ancestor Agrasen).
§ Occupations
(Chamar, Patel or
Patil, meaning Village Headman, Gandhi, Kamath, Kulkarni,
who used to maintain the accounts and records and collect taxes, Kapadia, Nadkarni, Patwardhan, Patwari, Shenoy, etc.)
and priestly distinctions (Bhat, Bhattar, Sastry, Trivedi, Shukla, Chaturvedi,
Twivedi, Purohit, Mukhopadhyay); Business people: Shetty, Rai, Hegde is
commonly used in kshatriya castes of the karnataka costal belt. In addition
many Parsi, Bohra and Gujarati families
have used English trade names as last names since the 18th and 19th centuries
(Contractor, Engineer, Builder).
§ Caste or clan names (Pillai,
Gounder, Goud, Gowda, Boyar, Parmar, Sindhi, Vaish, Reddy, Meena and Naidu) are
not surnames but suffixes to first names to indicate their clan or caste.
§ Place
names or names derived from places of ancestral origin (Aluru, Marwari,
Gawaskar, Gaonkar, Mangeshkar, Kapoor, Wamankar, Kokradi,
Karnad, Medukonduru, Rachapalli).
§ A few
last names originate from names (Juthani)
§ The
father's first name is used as a surname in certain Southern states, such as Kerala, Karnataka and Tamil Nadu.
However, after the marriage the bride uses her husband's first name instead.
§ Muslim surnames generally follow
the same rules used in Pakistan. Khan is
among the most popular surnames, often signifying Afghan/Central Asian descent.
§ Bestowed
titles or other honorifics (titles bestowed by kings, rajas, nawabs and other
nobles before the British Raj (Wali, Rai, Rao, Tharakan, Panicker, Vallikappen,
Moocken, etc.) and those bestowed by the British (Rai, Bahadur).
§ Names
indicating nobility or feudal associations or honorifics (Chowdary, Naidu,
Varma, Singh, Burman, Raja, Reddy, Tagore, Thakur)
§ Colonial
Surnames based on tax or after religious conversion, particularly in Goa, which
was under Portuguese control (D'Cruz, Pinto). Often, surnames of Portuguese
noble families who were accepted as godparents were used as the surnames of the
converted. Some families still keep their ancestral Hindu surnames along with
their given Catholic Surnames e.g. Miranda-Prabhu and Pereira-Shenoy.
§ In Kerala the practice of using the
house name before or after the given name is on the rise. For example Asin
Thottumkal - Asin is the given name while Thottumkal is the
house name.
The convention is to write the first name followed by middle names and
surname. It is common to use the father's first name as the middle name or last
name even though it is not universal. In some Indian states like Maharashtra,
official documents list the family name first, followed by a comma and the
given names.
It is customary for wives to take the surname of their husband after
marriage. In modern times, in urban areas at least, this practice is not
universal. In some rural areas, particularly in North India, wives may also
take a new first name after their nuptials. Children inherit their surnames
from their father.
Jains generally use Jain, Shah, Firodia, Singhal or Gupta as
their last names. Sikhs generally use the words Singh ("lion")
and Kaur ("princess") as surnames added to the
otherwise unisex first names of men and women, respectively. It is also common
to use a different surname after Singh in which case Singh or Kaur are used as
middle names (Montek Singh Ahluwalia, Surinder Kaur
Badal). The tenth Guru of Sikhism ordered (Hukamnama)
that any man who considered himself a Sikh must use Singh in
his name and any woman who considered herself a Sikh must use Kaur in
her name. Other middle names or honorifics that are sometimes used as surnames
include Kumar, Dev, Lal, and Chand.
The modern-day spellings of names originated when families translated
their surnames to English, with no standardization across the country.
Variations are regional, based on how the name was translated from the local
language to English in the 18th, 19th or 20th centuries during British rule.
Therefore, it is understood in the local traditions that Agrawal and Aggarwal
represent the same name derived from Uttar Pradesh and Punjab respectively.
Similarly, Tagore derives from Bengal while Thakur is from Hindi-speaking
areas. The officially recorded spellings tended to become the standard for that
family. In the modern times, some states have attempted standardization,
particularly where the surnames were corrupted because of the early British
insistence of shortening them for convenience. Thus Bandopadhyay became
Banerji, Mukhopadhay became Mukherji, Chattopadhyay became Chatterji, etc. This
coupled with various other spelling variations created several surnames based
on the original surnames. The West Bengal Government
now insists on re-converting all the variations to their original form when the
child is enrolled in school.
Some parts of Sri Lanka, Thailand, Nepal, Burma, and Indonesia have
similar patronymic customs to those of India.
1 comment:
What an exhaustive treatise on components of personal names!
As a librarian concerned with rendering of Authors' names in writing catalogue cards we study about names. Thanks for an insightful input.
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