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Indian 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 Languages of India of
languages and nearly every major religion in the world has a substantial following in India. This variety makes for subtle, often confusing, differences in names and naming styles. For example, the concept of a second name did not exist widely in South India until modern legal systems initiated the use of second names to reduce the occurrence of name clashes.
For many Indians, their birth name is different from their official name; the birth name starts with a letter considered auspiscious on the basis of the person's horoscope. Some children are given three names: a unique first name, an (often) unique middle name, and a last name, which is usually the family name. It can also 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: a first and a last. The first name is often unique and the last name is usually the family name. One person having four names is uncommon, as are persons with single, unique names.
Geographical distribution
Sub-national divisions in India have been drawn up based on linguistic lines and therefore some clear geographical distribution of family names is apparent.{| class="wikitable" align="center" style="text-align:center; width:70%"|-! width="30%" | State(s)! width="20%" | Language! width="50%" | Last names|-!
Jammu and Kashmir| Syed, Ahmed, Wani|-! [Himachal Pradesh,
Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh,
Delhi| Aggarwal, Agrawal, Bansal, Mittal, Srivastava, Dwivedi, Chaturvedi, Dixit|-! [Punjab| Singh, Bhatia, Bhagat, Badal|-! [Haryana, [Haryanvi, [Jharkhand| Yadav, Mishra, Dubey, Thakur|-! [Madhya Pradesh, Chattisgarh| Jaitley, Jadhav, Scindia, Goyal, Mistry|-! [West Bengal| Banerjee, Mukherjee, Chatterjee, Upadhay, Bose, Ghose, Sen, Bhattacharya, Roy, Das, Dasgupta, Gupta|-! [Orissa| Patnaik,Dutta|-! [Assam| Barua, Baruah, Borah, Borkakoti, Gogoi|-! [Sikkim, [Tibetan| [Manipuri| [Gujarati| [Marathi| [Goan| [Telugu| [Kannada| [Malyalam| [Tamil people| Iyer,Iyengar,Gounder,Babu,Karthik,Subramanium,Palani,Murugan|-|}
Names by caste
For Hindus belonging to the upper
castes, the lineage of a person is known through his or her gotra, which is usually the name of the first traceable paternal ancestor in their lineage, like atreya, koundinya etc. For some people, it may be the ancestral profession or village name. Two people of the same gotra cannot wed, as they are supposed to be related filially. Lower caste Hindus often lack formal last names. Some use place names or caste names as surnames. Muslims often use two given names instead of surnames.
Many upper caste Indians use ancestral village names, occupations, honorifics, titles, caste or clan derivatives as their family names. The subcaste names are themselves derived from occupations or characterics of the subcaste ie: Within subcastes among Telugu brahmins: "Niogi" derives from ancestral appointments as ministers of the royal court. "Vaideeki" denotes an ancestor who followed the profession of religious teaching, and "Velanati" and "Telaganya" indicate the ancestral places of their origin. These are used for subcaste identification and not necessarily indicated as part of the name.
Due to caste-based discrimination or favouritism (mostly in government jobs), many people started adopting generic last names such as Kumar. Many film stars such as 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 last names e.g. Rajesh Ranjan or Abhishek Anand. Many people have two first names as their name e.g. Amit Vikram.
Sometimes a family name is added on to the end of the name as an initial, eg. Noushad S. U. (or S. U. Noushad) the shortened form of Noushad Shafi Ulooji, which is interpreted as Noushad, son of Shafi of the Ulooji family.
Names by religion
Hindu names
Typically a
Hindu name will have a given first name, may or may not have a middle name (which can be the father's name in some regions like Maharashtra &
Gujarat or simply Kumar for males and Kumari for females), and a last name or family name. Again,
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was an example of this; he was the son of Karamchand Gandhi, and his own sons all had the middle name Mohandas. Similarly
Subhadra Kumari Chauhan is a female name with middle name as Kumari indicating she is a female.
After marriage usually the Hindu girl's surname is changed to husband's surname or husband's name (as in south Indian community). The girl's surname is changed since "the Gotra" is changed after the marriage. In south India if a married girl's name is Sudha Ramesh this means that Sudha is married to Ramesh - name of her husband (not the surname). Modern Indian Girls sometimes prefer to retain both their original surname and the surname of her husband.
Also in many South Indian states the names are very big so the abbreviated name is commonly used e.g. MBSS Shastry. In such case the person is called by his surname only! Such names have the father's name, village & locality names also.
In Indian subcontinent the middle name is slowly being abolished e.g. Nirmalendu Bikash Bhar has become Nirmalendu Bhar. Also many Indian have been given salutation like Rai Bahadur, Raja, Sardar, Maharaja etc. which also are used in some names. In Hindu names the surname usually signifies the cast or community to which the person belongs e.g. Abhijeet Mukherjee (Abhijeet - name and Mukherjee is a Brahmin surname). Most of the names has some significance and meanings. Many Hindu families have name giving ceremony after child birth usually made after the horoscope of the child.
Nicknames are very popular among the Hindus. In the same family the boy or the girl is known & called by their nicknames. If there are many brothers & sisters then their names also follow a certain pattern or sound. Friends and community members sometimes call each other by some other name (other than their real names) to identify among the group members only.
Muslim names
The pattern of Muslim names mostly does not follow the Arabic Name but more like other places they belong to. The names follow the Indian system, just first and second name and may be caste(sur) name at the end. However the Chishty sufi order has a big population in northern India and especially in the punjab, so many followers have adopted this name as a surname, or an other name,however the direct descendants of Hazrat Gharib Nawaz such as Fahrid Chishty, the youngest sufi in Britain,carry this name with them as an honourific title.Direct decendants of Gharib Nawaz, however, spell their surname with a'y' at the end, rather than their devotees, who tend to spell it with an'i'.
Sikh names
A person's religious affiliations also affects his or her last name.
Sikh men all use
Singh (meaning lion-hearted) as a suffix to their names and that is often used just as any other last name would be. Sikh women use
Kaur(meaning princess). The name "Singh" predates the Sikh faith and is still common amongst upper caste Kshatriyas; both as "Singh" or the suffix "-sinh" as part of their given or family names. Manmohan Singh, the current
Prime Minister of India belongs to the
Sikhism. Some Sikhs use Singh as a middle name and use a last name that identifies their clan or hometown, like the cricketer Navjot Singh Sidhu.
Jain names
Jains, followers of
Mahavira, often use the last name
Jain. Like "Singh", this is also a surname used by other
Hindus especially upper caste Thakurs (Kshatriyas) or Rajputs.
Christian names
Christian names in India have over the past two centuries evolved into a unique amalgamation of Indian and Western patterns. For example consider X. Antony Alex Miranda - Here, X represents Xavier, his father; Miranda is the surname or family name; Antony and Alex are the first and second names.
Christian names have strong regional influences too. Naming styles in Kerala are different from Goa or for that matter North east.
Names by profession
The
caste or subcaste name is often used as part of a name or as a title. These are analogous to western family names like Smith and Barber to the extent that they represent occupation. Chowdary (Hindu Telugu people landowner caste) is an example.
Mohandas Gandhi belonged to the caste of Gandhis (grocers). Where the use of surnames was not customary, use of the
caste name as the surname is increasing in recent times. Examples of surnames of this kind from southern India include Iyer,
Iyengar, Gounder, Gowda, Nair, Naidu, Patel, Shetty/Setty.
There are a few exogamous divisions within castes. These are usually on the basis of deities worshipped by the family. For example, Tamma (within the Reddy caste). This is widely followed by the Telugu people. The last name name of Bal Gangadhar Tilak, another Independence-era leader, belongs to this category. This is more common among castes, like the Brahmins, that are spread throughout the country. Kamath and
Shenoy are both
Konkani Brahmin last names. Clan names are used only in small communities scattered around the country. The Chota Nagpur tribals use as clan names the names of animal deities with whom they claim kinship. The Kodavas of South India also have clan names.
Some families in India rename themselves on the basis of their profession. This is common among the
Parsis, who often have surnames ending with "wala" (also spelled "walla" or "wallah"), meaning someone who engages in a particular activity. Names like Screwala when the person might have sold screws, or Cyclewala (cycle seller) are quite common; one Bollywood actress is named Shenaz Treasurywala. Many social ranks were also hereditary. Names such as Talukdar,
Tehsildar, Tarafdar and Pillai are based on social rank.
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 the Indian Air Force.
It is also common for people to name their children after international personalities. Most of the times the surname is used as a first name, like
Albert Einstein,
Churchill, John F Kennedy, Ludwig van Beethoven, Shakespeare etc., and tend to denote the parents' political affiliations. Like 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.
South Indian names
For a long time, South Indians had a simple naming system. Historically, everyone was given a single name, which was chosen in one of three ways that South Indians chose their names on the basis of:
- The name of their village/town, e.g. Chavali, Hattiangdi, Janaswamy, Kokradi, Mangalore etc.
- Their family name, e.g. Pulithevar
- or both, e.g. Dantoj Pranith Kumar
The concepts of initials, middle names, family names and surnames are foreign to a Tamilian. Everyone had a single name like
Murugesh or
Lakshmanan. Occasionally these names were extremely lengthy. A lengthy name could be interpreted as a sign of parental affection. However it was not the full name of a particular family, nor did it give more information about that family.
Under British India, Indians were expected to follow English procedures for official purposes such as registering births, enrolling children in school and registering land ownership details.
Many South Indians, especially Telugu people, use the name of their ancestral hometown, or the family profession as the family name. In this case 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 their last name the "tharavaad", a description of their ancestral home. Names like Pramod Perumparambil and Paul Chemmanoor fall under this category.
In southern India, especially in Tamil Nadu and
Kerala where caste symbols tend to be kept private, there is 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 Ashwin, then his name would be Ashwin Ajith.
It is common for Tamil women to adopt their husband’s first name as their own surname. 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 as their last names. 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. Their last names are then the given names of their fathers or husbands.
Among Christians in Kerala, it is a common practice to have a middle name which is the baptismal name, usually the first name of a grandparent or godparent, like Roshni Mary George and Anoop Antony Philip. Until about two decades ago, some people were named in the 'Family name-Given name-Caste' format. Eg Kannoth
Karunakaran Maarar, interpreted as Karunakaran of the Maarar caste from the Kannoth family.
Initials
In Western societies, when there are two people with the same name, for example, Robert Jones and Robert Smith, in an elementary school class, they are referred to as Robert J. and Robert S. respectively to avoid confusion. But two Ramans in South India do not have different surnames, since Raman is their only name. 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 certain societies, a person without an initial is presumed illegitimate, and may be looked down upon. An initial is also compulsory for government records. A missing initial in certificates, bank transactions and so on may be considered illegal.
In some parts of Tamil Nadu, traditional family names have recently been abandoned in favour of a father's/husband's first name as a family name. The use of a father's/husband's first name as a family name is in vogue. These family 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 name and/or village/town/city name. Mandating expansion of initials in passport and MNCs that are influenced by western standards are big source of confusion in South India--letter for Raja Gopala Varma, son of Krishna Kumar who is usually referred as "K. Raja Gopala Varma" will be addressed wronlgy as "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 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 in order 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 uses 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 in 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 first name is "Palaniyappan", and the last name or the family name is "Chidambaram". In fact, the person's only name is "Chidambaram", with an initial of "P". 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 (son of Dr Ramadoss) often simply as Dr Ramadoss, which again is wrong as Ramadoss is his father's name and not surname.
Surnames or family names
Many South Indians also use a
family name.
Last names are not common among the
Tamil people, but most of the rest of India uses a family name.
Invented family names such as that of Rajesh Pilot.
The English last name of Anglo-Indians - descendants of British and Indian parents.
Portuguese-Goan last names, such as Fernandes.
Third- or later generation expatriate Indians and others who now have last names that were the given names of one of their ancestors or have intermarried enough to ensure that the last names are not caste/religion names in disguise.
Telugu names
The family names(last name or surname) in Telugu people are mostly abbreviated. For e.g., the name Nagaraju Ponnam would be abbreviated as P.Nagaraju. In this name Nagaraju is the first name, and Ponnam would be the lastname. Some of the people who belong to a particular
caste include the caste names in their names, especially [[Chowdary. For eg., Raj Reddy , Hari Chowdary. In general, if the name of a person in western world format would be Raj Reddy Kuchi (First name, middle name and last name), then the name in Telugu speaking areas would be written as K. Raj Reddy.
No concept Middle name in telugu people. Some names are preceded by hindu gods names For e.g., Venkata Sai ( both are gods names) precedes the name Laxman Vangipuram is abbreviated as V.V.S.Laxman ( Vangipuram venkata sai Laxman)
and some of the muslim names also we can see in hindu's who are prayed the muslim gods like mouli.he is an hindu but their parents are belive one local muslim god names moulali so their parents put that name.
Unlike other south Indian names, the name of father is rarely used in a person's name.
Tamil names
Many Tamils use a "vilasam". That gives the initials (a syllable in Tamil language) of the person's paternal ancestors up to, say, seven generations. This keeps every one readily identifiable. For example, in a reasonably sized community Mu. Ko. Ka. Mu. Tha. Er. Ganesh would be the cousin of Mu. Ko. Ka. Mu. Tha. Ka. Ganesh.
When the initial is expanded it refers to the name of the father, and not the person bearing the name. So the last name tend to be the original and actual(given) name of the individual and first name stands for the father. This south indian tredition of naming humans in is quiet opposite of the tredition in europe, US and worldwide. e.g., C. V. Raman who won the 1930 Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on the scattering of light and for the discovery of the Raman effect. Sir Raman was from Tiruchirappalli a town in south india, Tamilnadu. His full name is Chandrashekhara Venkata Raman(C.V. Raman), but Raman is the given/actual/ first/ and real name of the nobel laureate. Where as 'Chandrashekharan' is his father name. Raman is not the family name of the nobel laureate as mostly misunderstood by the people of the europe and US.
In Tamilnadu, only the first initial (father's) is used with the given/first name. The first name of a person is expanded and used only at legal documents such as passports, court proceedings and wills.
Tamil names also contain the village name in the following order: village name-father name-given name. For Eg Monkombu Sambasivan Swaminathan who is known as M. S. Swaminathan is one of the most popular Indian scientist and known as "Father of the Green Revolution" in India. Swaminathan is the name of the person, Sambasivan is the name of the father and Monkombu is name of the village from where they have originated.
Surnames in south India would be their caste names if have to be strictly followed. Caste names are rarely used, since they are not unique and people exclude the caste in their names as castism is viewed as a controverial social problem in India and young people like to identify themselved not just by the caste they belong. Unique family names are hidden in the "caste", "sub-caste" and "tribe" names.
The first name last name tredition in south india is several thousand year old. In fact humans have discovered ways to regulate how to name chemicals (IUPAC norms) animals, plants, bacteria (binomial nomenclature) and other living beings. But there is lack of such standard regulation in instructing how to name humans but such regulations may be required in the future.
Malayali (Kerala) names
Kannada names
Kannada names might include place names, clan/title/caste names, father's names along with person's own name. The rules generally followed when combinations of the names used;
- The place name should always come first.
eg. Kadidal Manjappa, where Kadidal is place name and Manjappa is person's name.
- Father's name should always come second.
eg. Kuvempu, where Kuppalli is place name, Venkatappa is father's name and Puttappa is person's name.
- Initials from fathers Name and Place name
e.g
A.B. Narendra, where Adnoor is place name, Bheemappa is father's name and Narendra is person's name. Adnoor and Bheemappa can be initialled resulting in the name "A.B.Narendra".
- The clan/title/caste names (generally called surnames) must come last.
eg. Panemangalooru Ramesh
Shenoy, Panemangalooru is place name, Ramesh is person's name and
Shenoy is the surname.eg. Satish Ramanath Hegde, Satish is person's name, Ramanath is father's name and Hegde is the title(surname).
- Rare cases of ancestral housenames can also be found, and they follow the rule for place names.
However, if a person wants to go by only his/her name, there is a tendency in official circles to forcibly add extra names (generally, the place names).
Malaysian Indian Names - South Indian Origin
Most ethnic Indians in Malaysia trace their ancestral origin to South India. In Malaysia, the general naming format 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) in the Malay Language.
- In the British colonial days, male Indian 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.
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.
In the eyes of authorities in the West, the connective term A/L (son of in the Malay Language) appears deceptively similar to the Arabic prefix 'Al' which appears in numerous Surnames/ Family Names of people of Arab descent.
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 a very 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. Malaysian Indian females sometimes take their husband's given name as their Surname or Last Name.
East and west Indian names
Bengali & Oriya names
In addition to a family name, many
Bengali people (in both
West Bengal and
Bangladesh) have two given names: a
bhalo nam (lit. "good name"), which is used on all legal documents, and a
dak nam ("nickname"), which is used by family members and close friends. The two names may or may not be at all related; for example, a man named Deepak Biswas may be called by his
dak nam (e.g. Bablu) at home and a his
bhalo nam (Deepak) elsewhere. Many people also have a shortened version of their
bhalo nam (e.g. Deepu for Deepak, Faru for Farhana, etc.) in addition to their full
bhalo nam and their
dak nam. Recently, many Bengalis have begun to add their
dak nam to the end of their full official name, resulting in names like Saifuddeen Chowdhury Kanchon, where "Saifuddeen" would be the man's
bhalo nam, "Chowdhury" would be his family name, and "Kanchon" would be his
dak nam. In these situations, this man would be correctly addressed "Mr. Chowdhury", not "Mr. Kanchon". Bengali People and Oriya People (Oriyas, people form Orissa) Have many similar surnames such as Das, Chowdury, Chodhury, and many others. For Oriyas the "Bhala Naa" (lit. Meaning good name) is used for all legal documents, and "daka naa" is the nickname or pet name used by family and friends. Oriya surnames come from the caste system based on the occupation of people. For example, a common last name is Mohapatra and Das. They are both Brahmin last names however, they could be carepenter, and something else. The villages in Orissa, have the same concept, but is slightly different. They name first names by zodiac. For example, if a girl's name was "Bedhamati" the prefix "Be" is used for the zodiac Taurus. But other than that, it is the same concept everywhere.
Gujarati and Marathi names
In Gujarat and
Maharashtra, the naming system is very similar to the first-middle-last format followed in the western world, i. e., "
Sunil Gavaskar." Here, "Sunil" is the first name of the person, "Manohar" is the father's name, which is often abbreviated as an initial, and "Gavaskar" is the last or family name.
Traditionally, women take their husband's name as their middle name, in addition to adopting his family name. In Maharashtra sometimes a male newborn is named after his grandfather's name.
In Gujarat, people also add suffix to their names based on their gender. " Bhai" for Male and "Ben" for Female. e.g. Sunil is called Sunilbhai and Lata is called Lataben. Similar to the Gujarati way, Maharastrians address males as "Rao". e.g. Sunil will be called Sunilrao.
Frequent Gujarati surnames include
Patel, Mehta, Shah,
Desai, and Parekh. Frequent Marathi surnames include Kulkarni, Joshi, Deshpande, Deshmukh, and Patil.
A number of Marathi surnames end in 'kar', e.g. Gavaskar, Tendulkar,
Savarkar, Madgulkar, and are sometimes associated with the native village of the family or its ancestors. E.g., Chiplunkar may stand for origins in the town Chiplun.
References
- Kaushik, Devendra Kumar (2000) Cataloguing of Indic Names in AACR-2. Delhi: Originals. ISBN 81-7536-187-5.
names eg rahul, shrinil, vivek and lots more just visit V.V
External links
- India Names Only Hindu Indian Baby Names with the meanings.
- BabyNamesIndia.com Indian and Hindu Baby Names with Sanskrit meanings.
- My Friends Call Me Mo A humorous article about the naming confusion
Indian 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 Languages of India of
languages and nearly every major religion in the world has a substantial following in India. This variety makes for subtle, often confusing, differences in names and naming styles. For example, the concept of a second name did not exist widely in
South India until modern
legal systems initiated the use of second names to reduce the occurrence of name clashes.
For many Indians, their birth name is different from their official name; the birth name starts with a letter considered auspiscious on the basis of the person's horoscope. Some children are given three names: a unique first name, an (often) unique middle name, and a last name, which is usually the family name. It can also 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: a first and a last. The first name is often unique and the last name is usually the family name. One person having four names is uncommon, as are persons with single, unique names.
Geographical distribution
Sub-national divisions in India have been drawn up based on linguistic lines and therefore some clear geographical distribution of family names is apparent.{| class="wikitable" align="center" style="text-align:center; width:70%"|-! width="30%" | State(s)! width="20%" | Language! width="50%" | Last names|-! Jammu and Kashmir| Syed, Ahmed, Wani|-! [Himachal Pradesh,
Uttarakhand,
Uttar Pradesh,
Delhi| Aggarwal, Agrawal, Bansal, Mittal, Srivastava, Dwivedi, Chaturvedi, Dixit|-! [Punjab| Singh, Bhatia, Bhagat, Badal|-! [Haryana, [Haryanvi, [Jharkhand| Yadav, Mishra, Dubey, Thakur|-! [Madhya Pradesh, Chattisgarh| Jaitley, Jadhav, Scindia, Goyal, Mistry|-! [West Bengal| Banerjee, Mukherjee, Chatterjee, Upadhay, Bose, Ghose, Sen, Bhattacharya, Roy, Das, Dasgupta, Gupta|-! [Orissa| Patnaik,Dutta|-! [Assam| Barua, Baruah, Borah, Borkakoti, Gogoi|-! [Sikkim, [Tibetan| [Manipuri| [Gujarati| [Marathi| [Goan| [Telugu| [Kannada| [Malyalam| [Tamil people| Iyer,Iyengar,Gounder,Babu,Karthik,Subramanium,Palani,Murugan|-|}
Names by caste
For
Hindus belonging to the upper
castes, the lineage of a person is known through his or her
gotra, which is usually the name of the first traceable paternal ancestor in their lineage, like atreya, koundinya etc. For some people, it may be the ancestral profession or village name. Two people of the same gotra cannot wed, as they are supposed to be related filially. Lower caste Hindus often lack formal last names. Some use place names or caste names as surnames. Muslims often use two given names instead of surnames.
Many upper caste Indians use ancestral village names, occupations, honorifics, titles, caste or clan derivatives as their family names. The subcaste names are themselves derived from occupations or characterics of the subcaste ie: Within subcastes among Telugu brahmins: "Niogi" derives from ancestral appointments as ministers of the royal court. "Vaideeki" denotes an ancestor who followed the profession of religious teaching, and "Velanati" and "Telaganya" indicate the ancestral places of their origin. These are used for subcaste identification and not necessarily indicated as part of the name.
Due to caste-based discrimination or favouritism (mostly in government jobs), many people started adopting generic last names such as Kumar. Many film stars such as 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 last names e.g. Rajesh Ranjan or Abhishek Anand. Many people have two first names as their name e.g. Amit Vikram.
Sometimes a family name is added on to the end of the name as an initial, eg. Noushad S. U. (or S. U. Noushad) the shortened form of Noushad Shafi Ulooji, which is interpreted as Noushad, son of Shafi of the Ulooji family.
Names by religion
Hindu names
Typically a Hindu name will have a given first name, may or may not have a middle name (which can be the father's name in some regions like Maharashtra & Gujarat or simply Kumar for males and Kumari for females), and a last name or family name. Again,
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was an example of this; he was the son of Karamchand Gandhi, and his own sons all had the middle name Mohandas. Similarly Subhadra Kumari Chauhan is a female name with middle name as Kumari indicating she is a female.
After marriage usually the Hindu girl's surname is changed to husband's surname or husband's name (as in south Indian community). The girl's surname is changed since "the Gotra" is changed after the marriage. In south India if a married girl's name is Sudha Ramesh this means that Sudha is married to Ramesh - name of her husband (not the surname). Modern Indian Girls sometimes prefer to retain both their original surname and the surname of her husband.
Also in many South Indian states the names are very big so the abbreviated name is commonly used e.g. MBSS Shastry. In such case the person is called by his surname only! Such names have the father's name, village & locality names also.
In Indian subcontinent the middle name is slowly being abolished e.g. Nirmalendu Bikash Bhar has become Nirmalendu Bhar. Also many Indian have been given salutation like Rai Bahadur, Raja, Sardar, Maharaja etc. which also are used in some names. In Hindu names the surname usually signifies the cast or community to which the person belongs e.g. Abhijeet Mukherjee (Abhijeet - name and Mukherjee is a Brahmin surname). Most of the names has some significance and meanings. Many Hindu families have name giving ceremony after child birth usually made after the horoscope of the child.
Nicknames are very popular among the Hindus. In the same family the boy or the girl is known & called by their nicknames. If there are many brothers & sisters then their names also follow a certain pattern or sound. Friends and community members sometimes call each other by some other name (other than their real names) to identify among the group members only.
Muslim names
The pattern of Muslim names mostly does not follow the Arabic Name but more like other places they belong to. The names follow the Indian system, just first and second name and may be caste(sur) name at the end. However the Chishty sufi order has a big population in northern India and especially in the punjab, so many followers have adopted this name as a surname, or an other name,however the direct descendants of Hazrat Gharib Nawaz such as Fahrid Chishty, the youngest sufi in Britain,carry this name with them as an honourific title.Direct decendants of Gharib Nawaz, however, spell their surname with a'y' at the end, rather than their devotees, who tend to spell it with an'i'.
Sikh names
A person's religious affiliations also affects his or her last name.
Sikh men all use
Singh (meaning lion-hearted) as a suffix to their names and that is often used just as any other last name would be. Sikh women use
Kaur(meaning princess). The name "Singh" predates the Sikh faith and is still common amongst upper caste Kshatriyas; both as "Singh" or the suffix "-sinh" as part of their given or family names. Manmohan Singh, the current Prime Minister of India belongs to the
Sikhism. Some Sikhs use Singh as a middle name and use a last name that identifies their clan or hometown, like the cricketer
Navjot Singh Sidhu.
Jain names
Jains, followers of
Mahavira, often use the last name
Jain. Like "Singh", this is also a surname used by other Hindus especially upper caste Thakurs (Kshatriyas) or
Rajputs.
Christian names
Christian names in India have over the past two centuries evolved into a unique amalgamation of Indian and Western patterns. For example consider X. Antony Alex Miranda - Here, X represents Xavier, his father; Miranda is the surname or family name; Antony and Alex are the first and second names.
Christian names have strong regional influences too. Naming styles in Kerala are different from Goa or for that matter North east.
Names by profession
The
caste or subcaste name is often used as part of a name or as a title. These are analogous to western family names like Smith and Barber to the extent that they represent occupation. Chowdary (
Hindu Telugu people landowner caste) is an example.
Mohandas Gandhi belonged to the caste of Gandhis (grocers). Where the use of surnames was not customary, use of the
caste name as the surname is increasing in recent times. Examples of surnames of this kind from southern India include Iyer, Iyengar,
Gounder, Gowda, Nair, Naidu, Patel, Shetty/Setty.
There are a few
exogamous divisions within castes. These are usually on the basis of deities worshipped by the family. For example, Tamma (within the Reddy caste). This is widely followed by the Telugu people. The last name name of
Bal Gangadhar Tilak, another Independence-era leader, belongs to this category. This is more common among castes, like the Brahmins, that are spread throughout the country. Kamath and Shenoy are both Konkani Brahmin last names. Clan names are used only in small communities scattered around the country. The Chota Nagpur tribals use as clan names the names of animal
deities with whom they claim kinship. The Kodavas of South India also have clan names.
Some families in India rename themselves on the basis of their profession. This is common among the
Parsis, who often have surnames ending with "wala" (also spelled "walla" or "wallah"), meaning someone who engages in a particular activity. Names like Screwala when the person might have sold screws, or Cyclewala (cycle seller) are quite common; one
Bollywood actress is named Shenaz Treasurywala. Many social ranks were also hereditary. Names such as
Talukdar,
Tehsildar,
Tarafdar and Pillai are based on social rank.
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 the Indian Air Force.
It is also common for people to name their children after international personalities. Most of the times the surname is used as a first name, like
Albert Einstein,
Churchill,
John F Kennedy,
Ludwig van Beethoven,
Shakespeare etc., and tend to denote the parents' political affiliations. Like 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.
South Indian names
For a long time, South Indians had a simple naming system. Historically, everyone was given a single name, which was chosen in one of three ways that South Indians chose their names on the basis of:
- The name of their village/town, e.g. Chavali, Hattiangdi, Janaswamy, Kokradi, Mangalore etc.
- Their family name, e.g. Pulithevar
- or both, e.g. Dantoj Pranith Kumar
The concepts of initials, middle names, family names and surnames are foreign to a Tamilian. Everyone had a single name like
Murugesh or
Lakshmanan. Occasionally these names were extremely lengthy. A lengthy name could be interpreted as a sign of parental affection. However it was not the full name of a particular family, nor did it give more information about that family.
Under British India, Indians were expected to follow English procedures for official purposes such as registering births, enrolling children in school and registering land ownership details.
Many South Indians, especially Telugu people, use the name of their ancestral hometown, or the family profession as the family name. In this case 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 their last name the "tharavaad", a description of their ancestral home. Names like Pramod Perumparambil and Paul Chemmanoor fall under this category.
In southern India, especially in Tamil Nadu and Kerala where caste symbols tend to be kept private, there is 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 Ashwin, then his name would be Ashwin Ajith.
It is common for Tamil women to adopt their husband’s first name as their own surname. 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 as their last names. 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. Their last names are then the given names of their fathers or husbands.
Among Christians in Kerala, it is a common practice to have a middle name which is the baptismal name, usually the first name of a grandparent or godparent, like Roshni Mary George and Anoop Antony Philip. Until about two decades ago, some people were named in the 'Family name-Given name-Caste' format. Eg Kannoth
Karunakaran Maarar, interpreted as Karunakaran of the Maarar caste from the Kannoth family.
Initials
In Western societies, when there are two people with the same name, for example, Robert Jones and Robert Smith, in an elementary school class, they are referred to as Robert J. and Robert S. respectively to avoid confusion. But two Ramans in South India do not have different surnames, since Raman is their only name. 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 certain societies, a person without an initial is presumed illegitimate, and may be looked down upon. An initial is also compulsory for government records. A missing initial in certificates, bank transactions and so on may be considered illegal.
In some parts of Tamil Nadu, traditional family names have recently been abandoned in favour of a father's/husband's first name as a family name. The use of a father's/husband's first name as a family name is in vogue. These family 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 name and/or village/town/city name. Mandating expansion of initials in passport and MNCs that are influenced by western standards are big source of confusion in South India--letter for Raja Gopala Varma, son of Krishna Kumar who is usually referred as "K. Raja Gopala Varma" will be addressed wronlgy as "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 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 in order 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 uses 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 in 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 first name is "Palaniyappan", and the last name or the family name is "Chidambaram". In fact, the person's only name is "Chidambaram", with an initial of "P". 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 (son of Dr Ramadoss) often simply as Dr Ramadoss, which again is wrong as Ramadoss is his father's name and not surname.
Surnames or family names
Many South Indians also use a family name.
Last names are not common among the Tamil people, but most of the rest of India uses a family name.
Invented family names such as that of Rajesh Pilot.
The English last name of Anglo-Indians - descendants of British and Indian parents.
Portuguese-Goan last names, such as Fernandes.
Third- or later generation expatriate Indians and others who now have last names that were the given names of one of their ancestors or have intermarried enough to ensure that the last names are not caste/religion names in disguise.
Telugu names
The family names(last name or surname) in Telugu people are mostly abbreviated. For e.g., the name Nagaraju Ponnam would be abbreviated as P.Nagaraju. In this name Nagaraju is the first name, and Ponnam would be the lastname. Some of the people who belong to a particular
caste include the caste names in their names, especially [[Chowdary. For eg., Raj Reddy , Hari Chowdary. In general, if the name of a person in western world format would be Raj Reddy Kuchi (First name, middle name and last name), then the name in Telugu speaking areas would be written as K. Raj Reddy.
No concept Middle name in telugu people. Some names are preceded by hindu gods names For e.g., Venkata Sai ( both are gods names) precedes the name Laxman Vangipuram is abbreviated as V.V.S.Laxman ( Vangipuram venkata sai Laxman)
and some of the muslim names also we can see in hindu's who are prayed the muslim gods like mouli.he is an hindu but their parents are belive one local muslim god names moulali so their parents put that name.
Unlike other south Indian names, the name of father is rarely used in a person's name.
Tamil names
Many Tamils use a "vilasam". That gives the initials (a syllable in
Tamil language) of the person's paternal ancestors up to, say, seven generations. This keeps every one readily identifiable. For example, in a reasonably sized community Mu. Ko. Ka. Mu. Tha. Er. Ganesh would be the cousin of Mu. Ko. Ka. Mu. Tha. Ka. Ganesh.
When the initial is expanded it refers to the name of the father, and not the person bearing the name. So the last name tend to be the original and actual(given) name of the individual and first name stands for the father. This south indian tredition of naming humans in is quiet opposite of the tredition in europe, US and worldwide. e.g.,
C. V. Raman who won the 1930 Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on the scattering of light and for the discovery of the Raman effect. Sir Raman was from Tiruchirappalli a town in south india, Tamilnadu. His full name is Chandrashekhara Venkata Raman(C.V. Raman), but Raman is the given/actual/ first/ and real name of the nobel laureate. Where as 'Chandrashekharan' is his father name. Raman is not the family name of the nobel laureate as mostly misunderstood by the people of the europe and US.
In Tamilnadu, only the first initial (father's) is used with the given/first name. The first name of a person is expanded and used only at legal documents such as passports, court proceedings and wills.
Tamil names also contain the village name in the following order: village name-father name-given name. For Eg Monkombu Sambasivan Swaminathan who is known as M. S. Swaminathan is one of the most popular Indian scientist and known as "Father of the Green Revolution" in India. Swaminathan is the name of the person, Sambasivan is the name of the father and Monkombu is name of the village from where they have originated.
Surnames in south India would be their caste names if have to be strictly followed. Caste names are rarely used, since they are not unique and people exclude the caste in their names as castism is viewed as a controverial social problem in India and young people like to identify themselved not just by the caste they belong. Unique family names are hidden in the "caste", "sub-caste" and "tribe" names.
The first name last name tredition in south india is several thousand year old. In fact humans have discovered ways to regulate how to name chemicals (IUPAC norms) animals, plants, bacteria (binomial nomenclature) and other living beings. But there is lack of such standard regulation in instructing how to name humans but such regulations may be required in the future.
Malayali (Kerala) names
Kannada names
Kannada names might include place names, clan/title/caste names, father's names along with person's own name. The rules generally followed when combinations of the names used;
- The place name should always come first.
eg. Kadidal Manjappa, where Kadidal is place name and Manjappa is person's name.
- Father's name should always come second.
eg.
Kuvempu, where Kuppalli is place name, Venkatappa is father's name and Puttappa is person's name.
- Initials from fathers Name and Place name
e.g A.B. Narendra, where Adnoor is place name, Bheemappa is father's name and Narendra is person's name. Adnoor and Bheemappa can be initialled resulting in the name "A.B.Narendra".
- The clan/title/caste names (generally called surnames) must come last.
eg. Panemangalooru Ramesh
Shenoy, Panemangalooru is place name, Ramesh is person's name and Shenoy is the surname.eg. Satish Ramanath Hegde, Satish is person's name, Ramanath is father's name and Hegde is the title(surname).
- Rare cases of ancestral housenames can also be found, and they follow the rule for place names.
However, if a person wants to go by only his/her name, there is a tendency in official circles to forcibly add extra names (generally, the place names).
Malaysian Indian Names - South Indian Origin
Most ethnic Indians in Malaysia trace their ancestral origin to South India. In Malaysia, the general naming format 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) in the Malay Language.
- In the British colonial days, male Indian 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.
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.
In the eyes of authorities in the West, the connective term A/L (son of in the Malay Language) appears deceptively similar to the Arabic prefix 'Al' which appears in numerous Surnames/ Family Names of people of Arab descent.
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 a very 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. Malaysian Indian females sometimes take their husband's given name as their Surname or Last Name.
East and west Indian names
Bengali & Oriya names
In addition to a family name, many Bengali people (in both
West Bengal and
Bangladesh) have two given names: a
bhalo nam (lit. "good name"), which is used on all legal documents, and a
dak nam ("nickname"), which is used by family members and close friends. The two names may or may not be at all related; for example, a man named Deepak Biswas may be called by his
dak nam (e.g. Bablu) at home and a his
bhalo nam (Deepak) elsewhere. Many people also have a shortened version of their
bhalo nam (e.g. Deepu for Deepak, Faru for Farhana, etc.) in addition to their full
bhalo nam and their
dak nam. Recently, many Bengalis have begun to add their
dak nam to the end of their full official name, resulting in names like Saifuddeen Chowdhury Kanchon, where "Saifuddeen" would be the man's
bhalo nam, "Chowdhury" would be his family name, and "Kanchon" would be his
dak nam. In these situations, this man would be correctly addressed "Mr. Chowdhury", not "Mr. Kanchon". Bengali People and Oriya People (Oriyas, people form Orissa) Have many similar surnames such as Das, Chowdury, Chodhury, and many others. For Oriyas the "Bhala Naa" (lit. Meaning good name) is used for all legal documents, and "daka naa" is the nickname or pet name used by family and friends. Oriya surnames come from the caste system based on the occupation of people. For example, a common last name is Mohapatra and Das. They are both Brahmin last names however, they could be carepenter, and something else. The villages in Orissa, have the same concept, but is slightly different. They name first names by zodiac. For example, if a girl's name was "Bedhamati" the prefix "Be" is used for the zodiac Taurus. But other than that, it is the same concept everywhere.
Gujarati and Marathi names
In Gujarat and
Maharashtra, the naming system is very similar to the first-middle-last format followed in the western world, i. e., "Sunil Gavaskar." Here, "Sunil" is the first name of the person, "Manohar" is the father's name, which is often abbreviated as an initial, and "Gavaskar" is the last or family name.
Traditionally, women take their husband's name as their middle name, in addition to adopting his family name. In Maharashtra sometimes a male newborn is named after his grandfather's name.
In Gujarat, people also add suffix to their names based on their gender. " Bhai" for Male and "Ben" for Female. e.g. Sunil is called Sunilbhai and Lata is called Lataben. Similar to the Gujarati way, Maharastrians address males as "Rao". e.g. Sunil will be called Sunilrao.
Frequent Gujarati surnames include
Patel, Mehta, Shah,
Desai, and Parekh. Frequent Marathi surnames include Kulkarni, Joshi, Deshpande, Deshmukh, and Patil.
A number of Marathi surnames end in 'kar', e.g. Gavaskar, Tendulkar,
Savarkar,
Madgulkar, and are sometimes associated with the native village of the family or its ancestors. E.g., Chiplunkar may stand for origins in the town Chiplun.
References
- Kaushik, Devendra Kumar (2000) Cataloguing of Indic Names in AACR-2. Delhi: Originals. ISBN 81-7536-187-5.
names eg rahul, shrinil, vivek and lots more just visit V.V
External links
- India Names Only Hindu Indian Baby Names with the meanings.
- BabyNamesIndia.com Indian and Hindu Baby Names with Sanskrit meanings.
- My Friends Call Me Mo A humorous article about the naming confusion