The etymology of modern fr. Rahin (the name of a river in the Vosges comtoises region) has not been established. As Antoine Thomas had suspected, we are faced here with an oblique case (< -ÁNE), namely *Rohen, whose first vowel opened in aperture to [a]. The simple form Ro(h)e (subject case) was preserved in the Middle Ages through the dehydronymic name of a riverside locale, a name which subsequently changed into Roye. The first designation of the Rahin river as such, *Roe, has its origins in the substantivisation of the lat. RAUCA f. adj. 'uttering or making a harsh sound, raucous (of running water)'. The river's name has since gone through several other transformations. Its oldest form,Rahan(t) (1572), provides us with a new clue into the ancient affinity between the north-eastern part of Franche-Comtéwith the Franco-Provençal region. This clue seems to be corroborated by two other forms crystallized in the toponymy of Ronchamp.
Plan de l'article
1 "Molendini mei de la Saile, siti supra ripariam de Rohenney": deux noms propres géographiques ronchampois à identifier
2 L'hydronyme le Rahin
3 Le toponyme Roye
4 Le couple médiéval formé par *Rohen (> Rahin) et Ro(h)e (> Roye)
5 L'origine de *Ro(h)e, dénomination primaire du Rahin
6 Le toponyme médiéval Rouhate/Royate (près de Roye), l'hydronyme (?) la Rahaute (1572) et le toponyme au Vay la Rote (18e siècle)
7 Le microtoponyme Entre les Rahens > Entre les Rhins (Roye 18e siècle)
8 Le toponyme et l'hydronyme le Rhien (Ronchamp)
9 Goutte Ruand (Ronchamp)
10 Prés Lian (Ronchamp)
11 Sur une marge septentrionale du francoprovençal submergé
12 Bilan
Références bibliographiques et sigles
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