At one time it was thought Britain was named after an ancient bloke name of Brutus.
Russia was named after the Rus people, but I understood the OP as concerning countries named after individuals. If you bring in countries named after ethnonyms, that would be a huge category in itself. Somalia, Turkey, Iran, Bulgaria, Serbia, Croatia, Germany, Denmark, England, Scotland, Mauritania, Finland, Estonia, Tajikistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan, France, Belgium, are all examples of countries named after ethnic groups. Then there’s China named after the Qin dynasty.
Uzbekistan takes its name from a tribal confederation which was named after an individual who was a commander of Turko-Mongol forces.
The name Jordan is derived from an ancient Semitic (I guess either Canaanite or Hebrew) root, yarad, which means ‘to go down to the water’. Clearly, the Jordan River is the going-down-to-the-water par excellence, since it has such a long drop all the way down to the Dead Sea. The Arabic name for it is al-Urdun.
As long as pedantry is reigning supreme in this discussion, Tasmania (named after Dutch navigator and explorer, Abel Tasman) is a state of Australia, not a country
Canada can kick in the provinces of Alberta (named after one of Queen Vicky’s daughters), Prince Edward Island (named after Vicky’s dad) and British Columbia (meaning that part of the Columbia region that was under British control).
We used to have Rupert’s Land, but it underwent a name change in 1870.
Actually, Israel was not named after the Israeli people, but a person named Israel – the patriarch Jacob. So unless there was a similiar guy named Rus, that wouldn’t work for Russia.
Jomo - YaRaD is indeed the Hebrew root meaning ‘to go down’. Considering the fact that the nether end of the Jordan Valley is the lowest place on Earth, it’s an appropriate name.
As for the Kingdom of Jordan, the name is actually a shortening of *Transjordan[/], meaning the “part of Palestine east of the river Jordan”. It was split off from the western half of the country by the British in the 1930’s and given to the Hashemites - better known as "the guys from Lawrence of Arabia - who rule it to this day.
I grant that Israel was the other name for Jacob, and that this was the start of the House, or Kingdom, of Israel (a group of tribes all in that part of the holy land). But can anyone show me that Medinat Y’srael was named for the person rather than the group of people known collectively as the Kingdom of Israel?
If the latter is the case, I still put forward Russia. The Rus were a people, also known as the Kiev Rus. Maybe I’m just feeling argumentative tonight.
BTW, Floater, that’s an interesting factoid. But they were still known as the Rus. Aw, who cares? At least I got Saudi Arabia right, huh? Huh?
If we’re including former names, Hawaii used to be called the Sandwich Islands, named after John Montagu, the 4th Earl of Sandwich. (He’s more famous, of course, for having invented the sandwich.)
Mea Culpa. Looks like Gaudere’ law caught up to me
The explanation I always heard was that it was a serious mispronunciation of the original name of the country by various westerners. Unfortunately, I can’t find a cite for this on the net - even the georgian-Language sites out there seem really keen on only using the “International” name of the country, and in any case the present name would not be the same as the historical one (which, shamefully, I can’t find either).
I’d like to randomly point out that the nation of Colchis,famous of course in Greek legend as the site of the Golden Fleece, was an actual historical civilization that existed in the same geographical area as present-day Georgia.
Interestingly, its capital is named after the same fellow, who was also Duke of Albany.
I have always assumed our word for the country is derived from the same Greek word that gives us the personal name George, georgos (“farmer”). This is repeated on several sites I found, but this one presents two other theories besides: 1) it is derived from the Persian name for the Georgian people, gurzhi and 2) it is named after St. George. If it is named after St. George, Georgia qualifies as a country named after a person.
The Georgians name for their own country is Sakartvelo, or Sakartvelo Respublikis.