Of the executive orders made by President Donald Trump on his first day back in the White House, one generating tons of attention was perhaps the most symbolic: renaming the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America, in addition to ordering Alaska's Denali be changed back to Mt. McKinley after the 25th president. But these are not the only global naming disputes in recent history.
Greece and Macedonia For over a quarter century, the Balkans were at odds over the name of the Macedonia region, which contains large parts of Southeast Europe. Macedonia has "long existed as a northern region in Greece," said the BBC, and a quarrel began in 1991 when a "new nation, born out of the collapse of Yugoslavia," began calling itself Macedonia.
A deal was eventually reached in 2019 to name the country North Macedonia. But in 2024, Greece accused the nation's "new center-right government of breaking a historic deal on the country's name," said The Associated Press.
South China Sea China, Vietnam and the Philippines have different names for this body of water, and these titles are "not just semantic; they each advance a nationalist narrative and a historical claim," said The Diplomat. This "also reflects the geopolitical stakes in the South China Sea, where overlapping maritime and territorial claims have led to rising tensions among nations," said The Diplomat.
India Indians have long feuded over the name of their country. While the nation is officially called the Republic of India, many have pushed to change its name to Bharat, the Hindu word for India. Hindus have been pining to change the country's name officially, and the nation's constitution refers to it as "India, that is Bharat."
India's president has also referred to herself as the president of Bharat. And "while some supporters of the name Bharat say 'India' was given by British colonizers, historians say the name predates colonial rule by centuries," said Reuters. |