English Name |
Other names or former names |
Maastricht |
Mastriht (Serbian), Maastricht (Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Romanian), Maestricht (former French, Romanian variant), Mastrichtas (Lithuanian), Māstrihta (Latvian), Mastrique (Spanish), Mestreech (Limburgish), Traiectum ad Mosam or Traiectum superius (Latin), Måstrek / Li Trek (Walloon), マーストリヒト (Japanese) |
Madrid |
Madhríti - Μαδρίτη (Greek), Mǎdélǐ - 馬德里 (Traditional Chinese), Mǎdélǐ - 马德里 (Simplified Chinese), Madorīdo - マドリード (Japanese), مادریدPersian, Madri (Brazilian Portuguese), Madrid (Afrikaans, Asturian, Azeri, Catalan, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Hungarian, Interlingua, Italian, Maltese, Spanish, Portuguese, Romanian, Swedish, Turkish), Madridas (Lithuanian), Madride (Latvian), Madrido (Esperanto), Madrit (Old Catalan), Madryt (Polish), Maidrid (Irish), مدريد Arabic, Мадрыд (Belarussian), Мадрид (Bulgarian), Madril (Basque), 마드리드 (Korean), मद्रीद (Hindi) |
Mahilyow |
Mahilyoŭ - Магілёў (Belarusian), Mogilev (Russian), Mogilew or Mohylew (Polish), Molev - מאָלעװ (Yiddish), Movilău (Romanian), Moghilău (Romanian variant), Mogiliovas (Lithuanian) |
Mainz |
Määnz (local dialect), Magonza (Italian), Maguncia (Spanish), Magúncia (Catalan), Mainca (Latvian), Mainz (Dutch, Finnish, German, Romanian, Swedish), Majnc (Serbian), Mayence (French), Měiyīncí - 美因茨 (Traditional and Simplified Chinese), Mogúncia (Portuguese), Moguncja (Polish), Moguntiacum (Latin), Mohuč (Czech, Slovak), Meenz (former local dialect), Maienţa (old Romanian), Maghentía - Μαγεντία (Greek, along with the modern name),マインツ (Japanese) |
Malbork |
Malbork (Polish), Marienburg (German), Malborg (Romanian) |
Malmedy |
Malmedy (Dutch, French, German), Malmünde (former German) |
Malmö |
Ellenbogen (former German), Malme (Latvian), Malmø (Danish), Malmö (Azeri, Finnish, German, Swedish, Turkish), Malmogia (Latin), マルメ (Japanese) |
Manchester |
Manceinion (Welsh), Mančestera (Latvian), Manĉestro (Esperanto), Mančesteris (Lithuanian), Manchain (Irish), Mànchèsītè - 曼徹斯特 (Traditional Chinese), Mànchèsītè - 曼彻斯特 (Simplified Chinese), Manchéster (Portuguese), Mancunium (Latin) , Μαγχεστρία (Greek - καθαρεύουσα), منچستر Persian |
Mantua |
Mantoue (French), Mantova (Italian, Finnish, Czech, Romanian, Slovak), Mantua (Dutch, German, Latin), Mântua (Portuguese) |
Maribor |
Marburg an der Drau (German), Marburgo (Portuguese), Maribor (Azeri, Finnish, German, Romanian, Serbian, Slovene), Morpurgo (old Italian) |
Mariehamn |
Maarianhamina (Finnish), Mariehamn (Swedish) |
Marktredwitz |
Marktredwitz (German), Ředvice (Czech) |
Marseille |
Mareseļa (Latvian)*, Marseilla (Basque)*, Marseille (Finnish*, French*, Swedish*), Marseilles (English variant)*, Marsel' - Марсель (Russian)*, Marselha (Portuguese)*, Marselis (Lithuanian)*, Marselj (Serbian), Marsejlo (Esperanto)*, Marsella (Catalan*, Spanish*), Marseya (Ladino)*, Marsigghia (Sicilian)*, مارسی Persian, Marsiglia (Italian)*, Marsilha or Marselha* (Occitan), Marsilia (Romanian)*, Marsīliyā - مارسيليا (Arabic)*, Marsilya (Armenian, Turkish*), Marsel (Azeri*, Marsylia (Polish)*, Massalía - Μασσαλία (Greek)*, Massilia (Latin)*, Mạc Xây or Mac-xây (Vietnamese), Marseia - מרסיי (Hebrew)*, マルセイユ (Japanese) |
Mechelen |
Malinas (Spanish), Malines (Catalan, French, Romanian), Mechelen (Dutch, Finnish), Mecheln (German), Mechlin (older English name) |
Meißen |
Meisene (Latvian), Meißen (German), Meissen (Dutch, French, Romanian), Míšeň (Czech), Misnia (Italian), Miśnia (Polish), マイセン(Japanese) |
Melk |
Medlík (Czech), Melk (German), Mölk (former German) |
Menton |
Menton (French), Mentone (Italian) |
Messina |
Mesīna (Latvian), Mesíni - Μεσσίνη (Greek), Messina (Azeri, Dutch, Finnish, Italian, Maltese, Portuguese, Romanian, Turkish), Messine (French), Messyna / Mesyna (Polish), Missina (Sicilian), メッシーナ (Japanese) |
Metz |
Divodurum (Latin), Meca (Latvian), Mec - Мец (Bulgarian, Serbian, Russian), Mety (Czech), Metz (Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian) |
Medzhybizh |
Medschybisch (German), Medžibož - Меджибож (Russian), Medžybiž - Меджибіж (Ukrainian), Mezbizh - מעזביזש (Yiddish), Międzybórz (Polish) |
Miercurea-Ciuc |
Csíkszereda (Hungarian), Miercurea-Ciuc (Romanian), Szeklerburg (German) |
Mikkeli |
Mikkeli (Finnish), Sankt Michel (Swedish) |
Mikulov |
Mikulov (Czech), Nikolsburg (German) |
Milan |
Mailand (German), Mediolan (Polish), Mediólana Μεδιόλανα (former Greek), Mediolānum (Latin), میلان Persian, Milà (Catalan), Milaan (Afrikaans, Dutch), Milan (Azeri, French, Friulian, German, Maltese, Milanese), Milán (Czech, Spanish), Mǐlán - 米蘭 (Traditional Chinese), Mǐlán - 米兰 (Simplified Chinese), Milāna (Latvian), Milano (Croatian, Esperanto, Finnish, Italian, Romanian, Serbian, Slovene, Swedish, Turkish), Miláno - Μιλάνο (Greek, Slovak), Milánó (Hungarian), Mīlānū (Arabic), Milão (Portuguese), Milanas (Lithuanian), ミラノ (Japanese) |
Minsk |
Minsk - Мінск or Miensk - Менск (Belarusian), Minsk - Минск (Russian, Serbian), مینسک Persian, Minsk - מינסק (Yiddish), Mińsk (Polish), Mins'k - Мінськ (Ukrainian), Minska (Latvian), Minsko (Esperanto), Minszk (Hungarian), Minskas (Lithuanian), Minsk (Azeri, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Romanian, Turkish), ミンスク (Japanese) |
Miskolc |
Miskolc (Hungarian, Finnish), Miškolc (Serbian), Miškovec (Czech, Slovak), Miszkolc (Polish), Mişcolţ (Romanian) |
Moineşti |
Moineşti (Romanian), Mojnest (Hungarian) |
Modena |
Modène (French), Módena (Spanish), Mutina (Latin) |
Monaco |
Manaka - Манака (Belarusian), Monaco (Danish, Dutch, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Hungarian, Interlingua, Italian, Romanian, Swedish, Welsh), Monacó (Irish), Mónaco (Portuguese, Spanish), Mónàgē - 摩納哥 (Traditional Chinese), Mónàgē - 摩纳哥 (Simplified Chinese), Monakas (Lithuanian), Monako (Azeri, Basque, Esperanto, Latvian, Maltese, Polish, Serbian, Slovak, Slovene, Turkish), Monakó - Μονακό (Greek), Mónakó (Icelandic), Monegue (Occitan), Monoecus (Latin), Munegu (Monegasque), モナコ(Japanese) |
Mons |
Bergen (Dutch, German), Berĥeno (Esperanto), Mons (French, Romanian), Mont (Walloon), Berg (Limburgish) |
Monschau |
Monschau (German), Montjoie (French) |
Montbéliard |
Mömpelgard (German), Montbéliard (French, Romanian) |
Morąg |
Mohrungen (German), Morąg (German, Polish) |
Moscow |
Maskava (Latvian), Maskva (Lithuanian), Maskva - Масква (Belarusian), Mosca (Italian), Moscó (Irish), Moscou (French, Brazilian Portuguese), مسکو Persian, Moscova (Romanian), Moscou (Portuguese of Brazil), Moscovo (Portuguese of Europe), Moscú (Spanish),Moska (Maltese), Mosekao (Hawaiian), Mòsīkē - 莫斯科 (Traditional and Simplified Chinese), Moskau (German), Móskha - Μόσχα (Greek), Moskou (Afrikaans, Dutch), Moskova (Finnish, Turkish), Moskva (Armenian, Azeri, Bulgarian, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Estonian, Hebrew, Norwegian, Russian (English transcription), Serbian, Slovak, Slovene, Swedish, Ukrainian, Icelandic), Moskva - Москва (Russian), Moskve - מאָסקװע (Standard written Yiddish), Moskiv - מאָסקעװ (spoken Southeastern Yiddish), Moskeve - מאָסקעװע (spoken Central Yiddish), Moskvo (Esperanto), Moskwa (Indonesian, Polish), Mosukuwa - モスクワ (Japanese), Moszkva (Hungarian), Mūskū (Arabic), Matxcơva or Mạc Tư Khoa (Vietnamese, the latter is old-fashioned) |
Mosonmagyaróvár |
Mosonmagyaróvár (Hungarian), Wieselburg-Ungarisch Altenburg (German) |
Motovun |
Motovun (Croatian, Serbian), Montona (Italian) |
Monza |
Montsch (former German), Monza (Italian, Maltese) |
Mścisłaŭ |
See Amścisłaŭ |
Mukacheve |
Mucacevo (Romanian), Mukačevo (Czech, Slovak), Mukacheve - Мyкaчeвe (Ukrainian), Mukachevo - Мyкaчeвo (Russian, Serbian), Mukachiv - Мyкaчiв (Ruthenian), Mukaczewo (Polish), Minkatsh - מינקאַטש (Yiddish), Muncaci (Romanian variant), Munkács (Hungarian), Munkatsch (German) |
Mulhouse |
Milhüse or Milhüsa (Alsatian), Mülhausen (German), Mulhouse (Finnish, French, Romanian), Mylhúzy (Czech), Miluza (Polish) , Μυλούζη (Greek) |
Munich |
Minhen (Serbian), مونیخ Persian, Minhene (Latvian), Minkhn - מינכן (Yiddish); Miunchenas (Lithuanian), Miyūnikh (Arabic), Мюнхен/Myunkhen (Belarusian, Bulgarian, Russian, Ukrainian), Mnichov (Czech), Mníchov (Slovak), Monachium (Polish), Monaco di Baviera (Italian), Mónakho - Μόναχο (Greek), Monakovo (old Slovene), München (Dutch, Estonian, Finnish, German, Hungarian, Romanian, Low Saxon, modern Slovene, Swedish), Munĥeno or Munkeno (Esperanto), Múnich (Spanish), Münih (Turkish), Mùníhēi - 慕尼黑 (Traditional and Simplified Chinese), Munique (Portuguese), Mûnik (Walloon), Munikh (Armenian) Minga (Bavarian), ミュンヘン (Japanese) |
Munster |
Munster (French *, German*), Münster im Elsaß (German*) |
Münster |
Minstere (Latvian), Münster (German, Romanian, Turkish), Meuster (Walloon), Monastyr (Polish) |
Murmansk |
Moermansk (Dutch), Mourmansk (French), Murmansaka (Latvian), Murmansk - Мурманск (Belarusian, Russian, Serbian), Murmansk (Finnish, Italian, Romanian), Murmańsk (Polish), Murmanskas (Lithuanian), Murmansko (Esperanto), Muurmanni or Muurmanski (former Finnish), Muurmansk or Murmansk (Finnish); Romanov-on-Murman (former name), Múrmansk (Icelandic), ムルマンスク(Japanese) |
Mykolaiv or Mykolayiv |
Nikolayev or Nikolaev - Никола́ев (Russian) |
English Name |
Other names or former names |
Nakhichevan |
Naxçıvan (Azeri), Nakitchevan (French), Nachitschewan (German), Nachitsjevan (Dutch), Nakhcivan (Italian), Najicheván (Spanish), Nakichevan (Portuguese), Nachitjevan (Swedish), Nakhitsjevan (Norwegian, Danish), Nahitševan (Finnish), Nahhitševan (Estonian), Nakhichevan - Нахичевань (Russian), Nakhichevan - Нахічевань (Ukrainian), Nachiczewan (Polish), Nachičevan (Czech, Slovak), Nakhchivan - Нахчиван (Serbian), Nākhjāvān - نخجوان (Persian), Nahçıvan (Turkish), Nakhijevan - Նախիջեվան (Armenian), Nexcivan - نخچيڤان (Kurdish), Nakhchevani - ნახჭევანი (Georgian), Nakitseván - Νακιτσεβάν (Greek), Nakhitshevan - נחיתשיו'ן (Hebrew), Nakhitshifan - ناخيتشيفان (Arabic), Nākhtshewān - ܢܚܛܫܘܢ (Syriac), Nagsh-e Jahān - نقش جهان (former Persian) |
Namur |
Namen (Dutch, former German), Nameur (Walloon), Namur (French, German, Romanian) |
Nancy |
Nancy (Dutch, English, French, German, Romanian), Nanzeg (Luxembourgish), Nanzig (old German) |
Nantes |
Νάντη (Greek), Nantes (Dutch, French), Naoned (Breton)*, Naunnt (Gallo) |
Naoussa |
Naoussa - Νάουσα (Greek), Negush - Негуш (Macedonian, Bulgarian) |
Naples |
Nābūlī (Arabic), Napels (Afrikaans, Dutch), Naples (French), Napli (Maltese), Nápoles (Portuguese, Spanish), Napoli (Italian, Finnish, Norwegian, Romanian, Turkish), Nápoli - Νάπολη (modern Greek), Napolo (Esperanto), Nàpols (Catalan), Nápoly (Hungarian), Napule (Neapolitan), Napulj (Croatian, Serbian), Neapel (German, Swedish), Neapelj (Slovene), Neapol (Azeri, Czech, Polish, Slovak), Neapol' (Russian, Ukrainian), Neapole (Latvian, old Romanian), Neapolis (Latin, Lithuanian), Neápolis - Νεάπολις (ancient Greek), 拿坡里 (Chinese) |
Narbonne |
Narbo or Narbo Martius (Latin), Narbona (Catalan, Italian, Occitan, Spanish), Narbonne (Dutch, English, French, German, Romanian) |
Narvik |
Victoriahavn (former name 1887-1898) |
Navahrudak |
Naugardukas (Lithuanian), Navahradak - Наваградак (archaic Belarusian spelling), Nowogródek (Polish), Novogrudok - Новогрудок (Russian) |
Neuchâtel |
Neuchâtel (French, Romanian), Neuenburg (German) |
Newcastle upon Tyne |
An Caisleán Nua (Irish), Nova Castra (Latin), 纽卡素 (Chinese) |
Newport (Monmouthshire) |
Casnewydd (Welsh), Novus Burgus (Latin) |
Newport (Pembrokeshire) |
Trefdraeth (Welsh) |
Nice |
Nica (Latvian, Lithuanian*, Slovene*) , Nica or Nitsa - Ница (Belarusian, Bulgarian*, Serbian[:sr:Ница|*]]), Niça (Catalan*, Occitan), نیس Persian, Nicaea (Latin)*, Nicca or Nitstsa - Ницца (Russian)*, Nice (French*, Swedish*, Portuguese*), Nicea (Polish)*, Nico (Esperanto)*, Níkea - Νίκαια (Greek), Nis (Turkish), Nisa (Romanian)*, Nissa (Occitan variant*, Provençal), Niza (Spanish)*, Nizza (Italian*, Finnish*, German*, Hungarian), 尼斯 (Chinese) |
Nicosia |
Lefkoşe or Lefkoşa (Turkish), Lefkosía - Λευκωσία (Greek), Nicosia (Hungarian, Italian, Romanian, Spanish, Swedish), Nicósia (Portuguese), Nicosie (French), Nikosia / Lefkosia (Finnish), Nikosia (German), Nikosija (Latvian, Maltese, Russian, Ukrainian), Nikosio (Esperanto), Nikozija (Lithuanian, Serbian), Nikozja (Polish), Nīqūsiyā (Arabic) |
Nieuweschans |
Neuschanz (German), Nieuweschans (Dutch) |
Nijmegen |
Nijmege (Limburgish), Nijmegen (Dutch*, Romanian), نایمیخن Persian, Nimega (Italian, Spanish), Nimègue (French), Nîmegue (Walloon), Nimwege (local dialect), Nimwegen (German), Noviomago (Portuguese*), Noviomagus, Oppidum Batavorum and Ulpia Noviomagus Batavorum (Latin *) |
Niš |
Nis / Nisch (German), Nis / Nish (English, French), Ниш / Niš (Serbian), Ниш (Bulgarian),Niŝo (Esperanto), Nisz (Polish), Nix (Asturianu) |
Nivelles |
Nijvel (Dutch), Nivilles (French), Nisch (German), |
Nizhny Novgorod |
Gorky (former name 1932-1990), Nijni-Novgorod (French, Romanian, Turkish), Nischnij Nowgorod (German), Nizhni Novgorod (Finnish, Serbian), Nižni Noŭharad - Ніжні Ноўгарад (Belarusian), Nižnij Novgorod - Нижний Новгород (Russian), Ņižņijnovgoroda (Latvian), Nižny Novgordas (Lithuanian), Nižný Novgorod (Slovak), Nowogród (Polish) |
Novi Sad |
Neoplanta (Latin), Neusatz (German), Novi Sad (Azeri, Romanian), Novi Sad - Нови Сад (Serbian), Novi Sadas (Lithuanian), Novisada (Latvian), Nový Sad (Slovak), Nowy Sad (Polish), Újvidék (Hungarian) |
Nowy Sącz |
Neu-Sandez (German), Nowy Sącz (Polish), Sandz - סאַנדז (Yiddish) |
Nuoro |
Nugoro (Sardinian), Nuoro (Italian) |
Nuremberg |
Näöreberg (Limburgish), Neurenberg (Dutch), Niremvéryi - Νυρεμβέργη (Greek), Nirnberg (Serbian), Nirnberga (Latvian), Niurnbergas (Lithuanian), Norimberg (Slovene), Norimberga (Italian), Norimberk (Czech), Nörnberg (Low Saxon), Norymberga (Polish), Núremberg (Spanish), Nuremberga (Portuguese), Nürenberg (Romanian), Nürnberg (Estonian, Finnish, German, Hungarian, Swedish, Norwegian, Turkish), نورمبرگ Persian. |
English Name |
Other names or former names |
Obernai |
Oberehnheim (German*), Obernai (French*, German*) |
Óbuda (now part of Budapest) |
Altofen (German), Buda (Polish), Buda (Veche) (Romanian), Óbuda (Hungarian), Starý Budín (Czech) |
Odessa |
Ades - אַדעס (Yiddish), Hacıbey (obsolete Turkish), Одеса/Odesa (Ukrainian, Serbian), Odesa (Latvian, Romanian, Turkish), Odessa (Azeri, Polish, Russian, Turkish variant), Odhissós - Οδησσός (Greek) |
Ohrid |
Охрид (Macedonian, Bulgarian,Serbian), Ohrídha - Οχρίδα/Αχρίδα (Greek), Ohër (Albanian), Ochryda (Polish), Ohri (Turkish)
Older Graeco-Illyrian names include Dyassarites, Lychnidos, Lychnis, Ochrida, and Achrida
|
Olbia |
Olbia (Italian), Tarranoa (Corsican), Terranoa (Sardinian), Terranova Pausania (former Italian) |
Oldenburg |
Oldemburgo (Italian, Portuguese, Spanish), Oldenburg (German), Starogard (Polish, Serbian) |
Olkusz |
Hilcus (Latin), Ilkenau (German 1942-45), Ilkusz (former Polish), Olkusch (German), Olkusz (Polish) |
Olomouc |
Olmütz (German), Olomóc or Holomóc (Czech - Hanakian dialect), Olomouc (Czech), Olomuncium, Iuliomontium or Olomucium (Latin), Ołomuniec (Polish) |
Olsztyn |
Allenstein (German), Olštinas (Lithuanian), Olsztyn (Polish), Ольштын (Russian) |
Oneşti |
Oneşti (Romania), Onyest (Hungarian) |
Opatija |
Abbazia (Italian), Opatija (Bosnian, Croatian, Serbian, Slovene), Sankt Jakobi (German) |
Opava |
Opava (Czech), Opavia (Latin), Opawa (Polish), Troppau (German) |
Opole |
Opole (Polish), Opolí (Czech), Oppeln (German) |
Oradea |
Gran Varadino (Italian), Großwardein (German), Magno-Varadinum (Latin variant), Nagyvárad (Hungarian), Oradea (Romanian, Polish), Oradea-Mare (former Romanian), Varadinum (Latin), Varat (Turkish) |
Oranienburg |
Bocov (Czech), Bötzow (former German), Oranienburg (German) |
Oristano |
Aristanis (Sardinian), Oristan (Spanish), Oristano (Italian), Oristany (Catalan) |
Osijek |
Esseg (former German), Eszék (Hungarian), Mursa (Latin), Osijek (Bosnian, Croatian, Czech, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Romanian, Swedish), Osijekas (Lithuanian), Osiek (Polish), Осијек (Serbian), โอซีเยค (Thai) |
Oslo |
Asloa (Latin), Christiania (former Dano-Norwegian name 1624-1925), Kristiania (late version of former name), Oslas (Lithuanian), اسلو Persian, Oslo (Azeri, Indonesian, Danish, Dutch, Esperanto, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Latvian, Maltese, Norwegian, Polish, Romanian, Serbian, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish), Osló (Irish), Ósló (Icelandic), Ūslū (Arabic), 奧斯陸 (Chinese) |
Osnabrück |
Osnabrugge (Dutch alternate), Osnabrück (Dutch, German, Romanian),Osnabruque (Portuguese) |
Ostend |
Oostende (Dutch), Οστάνδη (Greek), Ostenda (Italian, Polish), Ostende (Czech, French, German, Portuguese, Romanian, Serbian), Ostendė (Lithuanian), Ostendo (Esperanto), Ostinde (Walloon) |
Östersund |
Östersund (Swedish), Østersund (Danish, Norwegian), Luvlieluspie (Southern Sami) |
Ostrava |
Ostrau (German), Ostrava (Czech, Slovak), Ostrawa (Polish) |
Ostrów Wielkopolski |
Ostrovia (Latin), Ostrów (former Polish), Ostrów Wielkopolski (Polish), Ostrowo (German) |
Oświęcim |
Auschwitz (German, Romanian), Aushvitsa (Romani), Aušvice (Latvian), Oshpitizin (Yiddish), Osvětim (Czech), Osvienčim (Slovak), Osvyenchim (Romani), Oświęcim (Polish), 奧斯威辛 (Chinese) |
Oulu |
Oulu (Estonian, Finnish, Polish), Olu (Latvian), Uleåborg (Swedish) |
Oxford |
牛津 (Niú jìn - literally ox ford) (Chinese), Okkusufōdo - オックスフォード (Japanese), Oksford (Azeri, Polish, Serbian), Oksforda (Latvian), Oksfordas (Lithuanian), Oksfórdhi - Οξφόρδη (Greek), Oksfordo (Esperanto), Oxonia (Latin), Oxónia (Portuguese), Rhydychen (Welsh) |
Ozieri |
Ocier (Spanish, Catalan), Othieri (Sardinian), Ozieri (Italian) |
English Name |
Other names or former names |
Padua |
Padoue (French), Padova (Italian, Finnish, Maltese, Romanian, Croatian, Czech, Serbian, Slovak, Slovene), Pádua (Portuguese), Paduja (Latvian), Padua (Dutch, German, medieval Latin, Swedish), Padwa (Polish), Padue (Friulian) , Πάδουα/Πάδοβα (Greek), Patavium (classical Latin) |
Palermo |
Palerma - Палерма (Belarusian), Palermas (Lithuanian), Palerme (French), Palermo (Azeri, Dutch, German, Italian, Finnish, Latvian, Maltese, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Serbian, Swedish, Turkish), Palermu or Palemmu (Sicilian), Panormos - Πάνορμος (Greek), Panormus (Latin) |
Pamplona |
Banbalūna (Arabic), Iruña (Basque), Pamplona (Azeri, Catalan, Dutch, Finnish, German, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian, Serbian, Spanish, Swedish), Pampelune (French), Pampaluna / Lunapampa (Old Provençal), Pampeluna (Polish), Pompaelo (Latin) |
Panevėžys |
Poniewież (Polish), Ponewesch (German), Paņevēža (Latvian) |
Paris |
巴黎 (Chinese), Bārīs (Arabic), Lutetia (Latin), Paräis (Luxembourgish), Páras (Irish), Pari - パリ (Japanese), Paries (Limburgish), Parigi (Italian), Pariġi (Maltese), Pariis (Estonian), Pariisi (Finnish), Parijs (Dutch), París (Catalan, Spanish, Icelandic), Paris (Azeri, French, German, Norwegian, Portuguese, Romanian, Swedish, Turkish), Parisium (medieval Latin), Parísi - Παρίσι (Greek), Παρίσιοι Greek - καθαρεύουσα), Париж/Pariž (Bulgarian, Russian), Pariz (Breton, Croatian, Slovene), Pariz - Париз (Serbian), Pariz - פּאַריז (Yiddish), Paříž (Czech), Paríž (Slovak), Parīze (Latvian), Parizo (Esperanto), Párizs (Hungarian), Parys (Afrikaans), Paryż (Polish), Париж/Paryzh (Ukrainian), Paryžius (Lithuanian), Paryž - Парыж (Belarusian), Pa-ris or Ba-lê (Vietnamese, the latter is old-fashioned) |
Parma |
Parme (French), Πάρμα Greek) |
Pärnu |
Parnawa (Polish), Pärnu (Estonian, Finnish, Portuguese, Swedish), Pernau (German), Pērnava (Latvian), Piarnu (Belarusian, Lithuanian) |
Passau |
Batavia Bavariae (feudal Latin), Castra batava (Roman Latin), Pasawa (Polish), Pasov (Czech), Passau (Dutch, French, German, Romanian, Turkish), Passavia (Italian) |
Patras |
Patra (Modern Greek), Patrae (Latin), Patrasso (Italian), Patras (Azeri, Dutch, French, German) |
Pazin |
Mitterburg (German), Pazin (Croatian, Serbian), Pisino (Italian), |
Pechory |
Petschur (former German), Petseri (Estonian, Finnish) |
Pécs |
Beci (old Romanian), Pětikostelí (Czech), Peç (Turkish), Pečuh (Croatian), Fünfkirchen (German), Päťkostolie (Slovak), Pecz (Polish), Pečuj - Печуј (Serbian), Quinqueecclesiae (Latin), Cinquechiese (old Italian) |
Peenemünde |
Peenemünde (German), Pianoujście (Polish) |
Perpignan |
Perpignan (Brazilian Portuguese, Dutch, French, Finnish, German, Romanian), Perpignano (Italian), Perpiñán (Spanish), Perpinhan (Occitan), Perpinhão (Portuguese), Perpinjan (Serbian), Perpinyà (Catalan) |
Perugia |
Pérouse (French), Perugia (Dutch, German, Italian, Romanian), Perusa (Spanish), Perusia (Latin) |
Petrozavodsk |
Petrosawodsk (German), Petroskoi (Finnish), Petrozavodsk - Петрозаводск (Russian), Petrozavodskas (Lithuanian), Pietrazavodzk - Петразаводзк (Belarusian), Petrozavodsk (Azeri), Äänislinna (former Finnish), Pietrozawodzk (Polish) |
Piacenza |
Piacenza (Dutch, German, Italian), Pjaćenca (Serbian), Plaisance (French), Plasencia (Spanish), Piacenţa (Romanian) , Placentia (Latin), Plakentia - Πλακεντία (Greek) |
Piatra Neamţ |
Piatra Neamţ (Romanian), Karácsonkő (Hungarian) |
Piła |
Piła (Polish), Schneidemühl (German) |
Pinsk |
Пінск [Pinsk] (Belarusian), Пинск [Pinsk] (Bulgarian, Russian), Pinsk (Dutch, French, German), Pińsk (Polish), Пінськ [Pins"k] (Ukrainian), פינסק (Yiddish) |
Piotrków Trybunalski |
Piotrków Trybunalski (Polish), Petrikau (German), Petrikev - פּעטריקעװ (Yiddish), Petrokov (Russian), |
Piran |
Piran (Croatian, German, Serbian, Slovene), Pirano (Italian), Pyrrhanum (Latin) |
Plauen |
Plauen (Dutch, French, German, Polish), Plavno (Czech) |
Pleven |
Pleven (Bulgarian, French, Serbian), Plevna (French alternate, Romanian, Russian), Plevne (Turkish), Plevno (Czech), Plewen (German, Polish) |
Plovdiv |
Filippopoli (old Italian), Philippolis (Roman Latin), Philipúpoli - Φιλιππούπολη (Greek), Plovdiv (Azeri, Bulgarian, Dutch, Finnish, Romanian, Serbian, Portuguese), Plowdiw (German), Płowdiw (Polish), Pulpudeva (Thracian, former name), Evmolpias (Thracian, former name), Trimontium (Roman Latin, former name), Filibe (Turkish, former name), Paldin (Slavic, former name) |
Plymouth |
Pleimuiden (Dutch alternate), Plimuto (Esperanto) |
Plzeň |
Pilsen (Dutch, English, German, Italian, Portuguese, former Romanian), Pilzene (Latvian), Pilzno (Polish), Plzeň (Czech, Romanian, Slovak) |
Podgorica |
Titograd (former name), Ribnica (former name), Podgorica (Finnish, Portuguese, Polish), Podgorica (French, German) |
Polatsk |
Połacak - Полацак (traditional Belarusian), Połack - Полацк(sovietized Belarusian), Połock (Polish), Полоцк, also transliterated as Polotsk, Polock (Russian), Poloţk (Romanian), Polotzk (German), |
Pompeii |
Pompei (Italian, Azeri, Romanian, Turkish), Pompéi (French), Pompéia (Portuguese), Pompej (Maltese), Pompeji (Danish, Dutch, German, Latin, Slovene, Swedish), Pompeya (Spanish), Pompeja (Latvian, Serbian), Pompeje (Polish, Czech), Pompiía - Πομπηία (Greek), Pompeiji (Finnish), Pompėja (Lithuanian) |
Porec |
Parenzo (Italian), Poreč (Croatian, Serbian, Slovene) |
Pori |
Björneborg (Swedish), Pori (Finnish, Portuguese, Romanian, Latvian) |
Porto |
Burtuqāl (Arabic), Oporto (Italian, Spanish, English variant), Portas (Lithuanian), Porto (Azeri, Czech, Dutch, Esperanto, Finnish, French, German, Maltese, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Serbian, Turkish), Portus Cale (Latin), Portu (Latvian |
Portorož |
Portorose (Italian), Portorož (Serbian, Slovene) |
Porvoo |
Borgå (Swedish), Porvoo (Estonian, Finnish, Portuguese, Romanian), Borgoa (Latin) |
Potsdam |
波茨坦 (Chinese), Podstupim (Lower Sorbian), Postupim (Czech, Slovak), Potsdam (Azeri, Dutch, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian, Swedish), Poczdam (Polish), Potsdama (Latvian), Potsdamas (Lithuanian) |
Poznań |
Poznań (Polish), Posen (Dutch, German), Posnania (Latin), Posnanie (French alternate, but only for the region/province), Poyzn - פּױזן (Yiddish), Poznaņa (Latvian), Poznanė (Lithuanian), Poznaň (Czech), Poznan (Azeri, French (for the city), Portuguese, Romanian, Serbian, Turkish), Poznań - Познань (Belarusian, Ukrainian), Poznanie (French alternate, but only for the region/province), |
Prague |
Birāġ (Arabic), Praag (Dutch, Limburgish), Prag (Bosnian, Croatian, Danish, German, Luxembourgish, Serbian, Swedish, Turkish, Icelandic), پراگ Persian, Prâg (Welsh), Prág (Irish), Pràg (Scottish Gaelic), Praga (Basque, Bulgarian, Catalan, Italian, Kashubian, Latin, Maltese, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Slovene, Spanish), Prago (Esperanto), Prága - Πράγα (Greek, Hungarian), Prague (English, French, Tagalog), Praha (Belarusian, Czech, Estonian, Finnish, Ido, Indonesian, Nauruan, Norwegian, Slovak, Ukrainian, Lithuanian), Prāga (Latvian), Prog - פּראָג (Yiddish), Puraha - プラハ (Japanese),布拉格 (Chinese) |
Pravdinsk |
Friedland (German), Pravdinsk (Russian), Romuva (Lithuanian) |
Prešov |
Eperies (German alternate), Eperjes (Hungarian), Peryeshis (Romani), Preschau (German), Presovia (Latin), Prešov (Slovak), Preszów (Polish), Пряшів/Пряшyв (Ruthenian) |
Priozersk |
Kexholm / Keksholm (Swedish), Käkisalmi (Finnish), Korela (alternative Finnish name), Priozersk (German, Russian) |
Priština |
Prishtinë (Albanian), Priština - Приштина (Serbian), Priština - Прищина (Bulgarian) Prischtina (German), Priština (Czech), Priştina (Romanian), Priştine (Turkish), Pristina (French, Portuguese), Pristino (Esperanto), Priština (Latvian, Lithuanian, Slovene), Prístina - Πρίστινα (Greek), Prisztina (Polish) |
Příbor |
Freiberg in Mähren (German*) |
Pruszcz Gdański |
Pruszcz Gdański (Polish), Praust (German) |
Przemyśl |
Przemyśl (Polish), Peremyshl - Перемишль (Russian, Ukrainian), Premisl - פּרעמיסל (Yiddish), Romanian), Peremisla (old Romanian), Pieramyšl - Перамышль (Belarusian), Prömsel (rare German) |
Pskov |
Pihkova (Finnish), Pihkva (Estonian), Pleskau (historical German), Pleskava (Latvian), Pskov (Azeri, Dutch, French, Romanian, Russian), Pskovas (Lithuanian), Pskow (modern German, Psków (Polish), Pskoŭ - Пскоў (Belarusian) |
Puck |
Puck (Polish), Pùck (Kashubian), Putzig (German) |
Pula |
Pola (Dutch, French, German, Italian), Póla (Hungarian), Pula (Croatian, Finnish, German, Portuguese, Romanian, Serbian), Pulj (Slovene), Polei (archaic German) |
Puławy |
Pilev - פּילעװ (Yiddish), Puławy (Polish) Pilev (English, Spanish) Pullno (German) |
Pyrzyce |
Pyrzyce (Polish), Pyritz (German), |