Traditional anthroponymicon of the Mordovian population of the village of Novaya Binaradka based on the materials of the Revision tale of 1762
Samara State University of Social Sciences and Education, Samara, Russian Federation, belenov82@gmail.com
ABSTRACT
Introduction: based on the analysis of the materials of the third Revision of 1762 (Revision tales) in the village of Novaya Binaradka, as well as a number of other archival documents, the article introduces into scientific circulation and analyzes the traditional Mordovian anthroponymy contained in the sources.
Objective: to identify and systematize the traditional anthroponymic material of the Mordovian people in the Revision tale of the village of Novaya Binaradka in 1762.
Research materials: materials of the third Revision in the village of Novaya Binaradka in 1762; archival documents on the Moksha and Erzya villages of the Middle Volga region; field materials by the author of 2019.
Results and novelty of the research: the research allowed us to compile a general description of the personal names of the Mordovian population of Novaya Binaradka during the third Revision in 1762. The main clusters of the Mordovian anthroponymicon of the village under consideration have been identified: Mordovian traditional names, Russian noncanonical names and Russian canonical names, the latter making up the vast majority. Among the traditional names, the proper Mordovian ones predominate. The scientific novelty lies in the fact that the archival documents considered in the work were analyzed for the first time in the context of the study of Mordovian traditional anthroponymy.
Key words: anthroponymy, Mordovian traditional anthroponymy, Mordovian people, canonical names, Samara Volga region, Revision tales, Novaya Binaradka
Acknowledgments: the author expresses gratitude to the informants.
For citation: Belenov N. V. Traditional anthroponymicon of the Mordovian population of the village of Novaya Binaradka based on the materials of the Revision tale of 1762 // Vestnik ugrovedenia = Bulletin of Ugric Studies. 2025; 15 (2/61): 214–223.


