Aach (toponymy)
Aach (variants Ach, Ache; Aa) is a widespread
The Old High German contraction from -aha to -aa, -â in compound hydronyms present from an early time (early 9th century). The simplex noun aha remained uncontracted, however, and Old High German -aha (Modern German -ach) could be restituted in compounds at any time.[1]
Related is the German Aue (variant Au) with a meaning 'river island, wetland, floodplain, riparian woodland', i.e. a cultivated landscape in a riparian zone. It is derived from the same root, but with a -yo- suffix (Proto-Germanic *awjō). This word was also reduced to a suffix, as -au (as in Reichenau). It is frequent as a river name, as in Große Aue, Aue (Elbe), Aue (Weser), etc., as well as the name of a settlement, as in Aue, Saxony; Au, St. Gallen; Au, Vorarlberg; Au am Rhein; Au am Leithaberge; etc.
The river-name Aach in Upper Germany is reserved for broad, but non-navigable, running streams with noticeable gradient sufficient to power
Hydronymy in -ach generally indicates a Germanic settlement in the early medieval or
References
- ^ super fluuiolo Geazaha a. 782; inter Uuiseraa et Fuldaa a. 813; in pago Uuestracha a. 839. H. Menke, "Komposita auf -aha, -apa" in: Das Namengut der frühen karolingischen Königsurkunden (1980), p. 346. Discussion of the early contraction of aha > â: D. Schmidt, Die Namen der rechtsrheinischen Zuflüsse, 1970, 123–154.
- ^ Maurnböck-Mosser, Ute (2002). "Die Haus- und Hofnamen im Gerichtsbezirk Mauerkirchen". ute.at.
- Berger, Dieter (1999). Duden, Geographische Namen in Deutschland. Herkunft und Bedeutung der Namen von Ländern, Städten, Bergen und Gewässern (2nd ed.). Mannheim: Duden. ISBN 3-411-06252-5.
- König, Werner (1994). "dtv-Atlas Nr. 3025". dtv-Atlas zur deutschen Sprache. Tafeln und Texte (10th ed.). München. ISBN 3-423-03025-9.)
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