Iceland review - 2014, Page 44

Iceland review - 2014, Page 44
42 ICELAND REVIEW to which there wasn’t a unanimous answer. Clinging on to the old naming system was considered old fashioned and outdated and perhaps might even give the impres- sion that icelanders themselves were out of touch (which they kind of were) and that was a sensitive subject. others were quite content with the old system and thought icelanders should stick to it; it had worked perfectly since settlement, when ingólfur arnarson and Hallveig Fróðadóttir turned up, each bearing their own surname (or so the Sagas tell us)—as have all married cou- ples from then on. Be true to who we are, they said, let’s not throw away a perfectly workable, not to mention unique, naming system that has served us for centuries. foREiGn nAMEs WiDEn Mix on the grounds of the uniqueness of the icelandic surname system, laws were passed which banned family names and even forced foreigners moving to iceland to take up an icelandic last and first name. This didn’t apply to all, however. Those icelanders who already had family names could keep them—and pass them on from parent to child—and it seemed as if some of our new settlers were famous enough that it didn’t matter if they had a not-so-icelan- dic-surname. The matter seemed to strike the respective authorities as something have a daughter, Guðrún, who is then Sigurðardóttir, and before anna got mar- ried to Sigurður she had a son, Kjartan, with another man, Tryggvi, and thus his name is Kjartan Tryggvason. So within this hypothetical—and yet so real—fam- ily we have four different surnames: Jónsdóttir, Halldórsson, Sigurðardóttir and Tryggvason. Complicated to some, but really icelandic in every way. and this is what is considered important to preserve and maintain. Since 1991, in the name of equality, it has been legal to be known as the daugh- ter or son of one’s mother instead of one’s father; so my own daughters could decide to be Bennýjardóttir instead of Óskardóttir (their father’s name is Óskar), and my son could be Bennýjarson instead of Óskarsson. They could even be both! Bennýjar- og Óskarsdóttir and Bennýjar- og Óskarsson (with or without a hyphen and in any order). even though human rights trump tra- dition, causing naming laws to be mod- ernized, and some icelanders have family names, they are the exception that proves the rule. But overall, we, as a nation, are still very much arnarson and Fróðadóttir, all those years later. * of an impolite gesture, so when a world renowned pianist was granted icelandic citizenship, no one asked: “Mr vladimir ashkenazy, do you mind calling yourself valdimar aðalsteinsson?” i don’t think any- one did at least, but those not-so-famous (or not-famous-at-all) had to change their names to good solid icelandic ones. later we came to our senses regard- ing new icelandic citizens and since 1996 they no longer have to change their names (not even if they are complete nobod- ies) because it goes against their human rights. Family names with a foreign and even exotic ring to them—which icelanders sometimes have no idea how to spell or pronounce—are thus becoming more and more common, but it’s still forbidden to create a new icelandic family name. and why? Because it’s considered to be of com- mon interest to maintain the old naming system; so most of us will keep on being arnarson and Fróðadóttir. in tHE nAME of tHE fAtHER (oR MotHER) it’s all for the public good. For the icelandic nation as a whole, who loves to explain to foreign friends how ‘unique’ our nam- ing system is. Within one family of four there may be anna Jónsdóttir, who is now married to Sigurður Halldórsson and they trAditioN son and dóttir Benný Sif Ísleifsdóttir is a folklorist, who covered this subject in her 2013 BA thesis.
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