Asminor planet discoveries are confirmed, they are given a permanent number by theIAU'sMinor Planet Center (MPC), and the discoverers can then submit names for them, following the IAU'snaming conventions. The list below concerns those minor planets in the specified number-range that have received names, and explains the meanings of those names.
Official naming citations of newly namedsmall Solar System bodies are approved and published in a bulletin by IAU'sWorking Group for Small Bodies Nomenclature (WGSBN).[1] Before May 2021, citations were published in MPC'sMinor Planet Circulars for many decades.[2] Recent citations can also be found on theJPL Small-Body Database (SBDB).[3] Until his death in 2016, German astronomerLutz D. Schmadel compiled these citations into theDictionary of Minor Planet Names (DMP) and regularly updated the collection.[4][5]
Based onPaul Herget'sThe Names of the Minor Planets,[6] Schmadel also researched the unclear origin of numerous asteroids, most of which had been named prior to World War II.
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in thepublic domain: SBDB New namings may only beadded to this list below after official publication as the preannouncement of names is condemned.[7] The WGSBN publishes a comprehensive guideline for the naming rules of non-cometary small Solar System bodies.[8]
| Named minor planet | Provisional | This minor planet was named for... | Ref · Catalog |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Ceres | – | Ceres, Roman goddess of agriculture, grain crops, fertility and motherly relationships | DMP · 1 |
| 2 Pallas | – | Athena (Pallas), Greek goddess of wisdom, handicraft, and warfare | DMP · 2 |
| 3 Juno | – | Juno, Roman goddess of marriage and childbirth | DMP · 3 |
| 4 Vesta | – | Vesta, Roman goddess of the hearth, home, and family | DMP · 4 |
| 5 Astraea | – | Astraea, Greek virgin goddess of justice, innocence, purity and precision | DMP · 5 |
| 6 Hebe | – | Hebe, Greek goddess of eternal youth, prime of life, and forgiveness. Cupbearer to the gods. | DMP · 6 |
| 7 Iris | – | Iris, Greek goddess of the rainbow and messenger of the gods | DMP · 7 |
| 8 Flora | – | Flora, Roman goddess of flowers, gardens and spring | DMP · 8 |
| 9 Metis | – | Metis, anOceanid from Greek mythology, one of the many daughters of the TitansOceanus andTethys. | DMP · 9 |
| 10 Hygiea | – | Hygieia, Greek goddess of health, one of the daughters ofAsclepius, god of medicine | DMP · 10 |
| 11 Parthenope | – | Parthenope, one of theSirens in Greek mythology | DMP · 11 |
| 12 Victoria | – | Victoria, Roman goddess of victory, daughter of Pallas and Styx | DMP · 12 |
| 13 Egeria | – | Egeria, minor Roman goddess andnymph, wife ofNuma Pompilius, second king of Rome | DMP · 13 |
| 14 Irene | – | Eirene, Greek goddess of peace, daughter ofZeus andThemis | DMP · 14 |
| 15 Eunomia | – | Eunomia, minor Greek goddess of law and legislation, daughter ofZeus andThemis | DMP · 15 |
| 16 Psyche | – | Psyche, Greeknymph and wife ofCupid, god of erotic love and affection | DMP · 16 |
| 17 Thetis | – | Thetis, aNereid (sea nymph) from Greek mythology, one of the 50 daughters ofNereus andDoris. She is the mother ofAchilles. | DMP · 17 |
| 18 Melpomene | – | Melpomene, theMuse of tragedy in Greek mythology. The nine Muses are the inspirational goddesses of literature, science, and the arts. They are the daughters ofZeus andMnemosyne. | DMP · 18 |
| 19 Fortuna | – | Fortuna, Roman goddess of chance, luck and fate | DMP · 19 |
| 20 Massalia | – | The city ofMarseilles (by its Latin name) in south-western France | DMP · 20 |
| 21 Lutetia | – | The city ofParis, capital of France, named by its Latin name,Lutetia. | DMP · 21 |
| 22 Kalliope | – | Calliope, theMuse of epic, heroic poetry in Greek mythology. The nine Muses are the inspirational goddesses of literature, science, and the arts. They are the daughters ofZeus andMnemosyne. | DMP · 22 |
| 23 Thalia | – | Thalia, theMuse of comedy in Greek mythology. The nine Muses are the inspirational goddesses of literature, science, and the arts. They are the daughters ofZeus andMnemosyne. | DMP · 23 |
| 24 Themis | – | Themis, goddess of law in Greek mythology. She is one of the 12 first-generationTitans, the children ofUranus (Father Sky) andGaea (Mother Earth). | DMP · 24 |
| 25 Phocaea | – | The ancient city ofPhocaea, located on the western coast of Anatolia (Asia minor). The Greek settlers from Phocaea founded the colony of modern-day Marseille, France, where this asteroid was discovered at theMarseilles Observatory. | DMP · 25 |
| 26 Proserpina | – | Proserpina, Roman goddess of fertility, wine, agriculture. She is the daughter ofCeres andJupiter, and was abducted byPluto into the underworld. | DMP · 26 |
| 27 Euterpe | – | Euterpe, theMuse of music and lyric poetry in Greek mythology. The nine Muses are the inspirational goddesses of literature, science, and the arts. They are the daughters ofZeus andMnemosyne. | DMP · 27 |
| 28 Bellona | – | Bellona, Roman goddess of war. The daughter ofJupiter andJuno is the consort and sister ofMars. | DMP · 28 |
| 29 Amphitrite | – | Amphitrite, sea goddess and wife ofPoseidon in Greek mythology. The queen of the sea is either anOceanid, one of the many daughters of the Titans Oceanus and Tethys or aNereid (a daughters of the Nereus and Doris). | DMP · 29 |
| 30 Urania | – | Urania, theMuse of astronomy in Greek mythology. The nine Muses are the inspirational goddesses of literature, science, and the arts. They are the daughters ofZeus andMnemosyne. | DMP · 30 |
| 31 Euphrosyne | – | Euphrosyne, one of the threeCharites (Graces) in Greek mythology. Charites are the daughters of Zeus andEurynome, an Oceanid (sea nymph). Her other two sisters areThalia andAglaea (Aglaja). | DMP · 31 |
| 32 Pomona | – | Pomona, Roman goddess of fruit trees, gardens, and orchards. She is the wife ofVertumnus god of seasons, change and plant growth. | DMP · 32 |
| 33 Polyhymnia | – | Polyhymnia, theMuse of singing of hymns and rhetoric in Greek mythology. The nine Muses are the inspirational goddesses of literature, science, and the arts. They are the daughters ofZeus andMnemosyne. | DMP · 33 |
| 34 Circe | – | Circe, goddess of magic in Greek mythology. The enchantress tried to influenceOdysseus and changed his companions into pigs. | DMP · 34 |
| 35 Leukothea | – | Leukothea, daughter of kingCadmus andHarmonia, the goddess of harmony and concord in Greek mythology. Leukothea later became the goddess of the sea and is also known asIno. | DMP · 35 |
| 36 Atalante | – | Atalanta, mythological Greek heroine, who would only marry the man defeating her in a footrace, while those who lost were killed.Hippomenes won the race against her with the help of three sacred apples he received fromAphrodite. | DMP · 36 |
| 37 Fides | – | Fides, the Roman goddess of faith, oaths and honesty | DMP · 37 |
| 38 Leda | – | Leda, queen of Sparta and mother ofHelen of Troy in Greek mythology. She was seduced byZeus in the guise of a swan(also seeLeda and the Swan). | DMP · 38 |
| 39 Laetitia | – | Laetitia, Roman goddess of gaiety | DMP · 39 |
| 40 Harmonia | – | Harmonia, Greek goddess of harmony and concord. She is the daughter ofAres (god of war) andAphrodite (goddess of love). | DMP · 40 |
| 41 Daphne | – | Daphne, a fresh waternymph (Naiad) in Greek mythology | DMP · 41 |
| 42 Isis | – | Isis, the Egyptian goddess who help the dead enter the afterlife. The name also alludes toIsis Pogson (1852–1945), British astronomer and meteorologist and daughter of the discoverer,Norman Pogson. | DMP · 42 |
| 43 Ariadne | – | Ariadne, Cretan princess and daughter of kingMinos from Greek mythology, who sent every seven years14 young noble citizens to the labyrinth, to be eaten by theMinotaur. Ariadne fell in love withTheseus and helped him to find his way out of the Minotaur's labyrinth. | DMP · 43 |
| 44 Nysa | – | The mythological region ofNysa. In Greek mythology, the mountainous was where the rain nymphs (Hyades) raised the infant godDionysus. | DMP · 44 |
| 45 Eugenia | – | Eugénie de Montijo (1826–1920), Empress of France and mother ofNapoleon Eugene, Prince Imperial, after whomAntoine de Saint-Exupéry's characterThe Little Prince is based. (The asteroid's companion is namedPetit-Prince) | DMP · 45 |
| 46 Hestia | – | Hestia, Greek goddess of the hearth, home, and family. She is the daughter of the TitansCronus andRhea. Alternatively, she is one of the sevenHesperides, nymph daughters of the TitansAtlas andHesperis. | DMP · 46 |
| 47 Aglaja | – | Aglaea (Aglaja), one of the threeCharites (Graces) in Greek mythology. Charites are the daughters of Zeus andEurynome, an Oceanid (sea nymph). Her other two sisters areThalia andEuphrosyne. | DMP · 47 |
| 48 Doris | – | Doris, anOceanid from Greek mythology, one of the many daughters of the TitansOceanus andTethys. Doris and her brotherNereus are the parents ofNerites and 50Nereids (also sea nymphs). | DMP · 48 |
| 49 Pales | – | Pales, Roman goddess of shepherds, flocks and livestock | DMP · 49 |
| 50 Virginia | – | The ancient Roman story ofVerginia (Virginia), a girl stabbed by her father in order to save her fromAppius Claudius Crassus in 448 B.C. It is also an allusion to U.S. state ofVirginia. | DMP · 50 |
| 51 Nemausa | – | The city ofNîmes in southern France (by its Latin name "Nemausa") | DMP · 51 |
| 52 Europa | – | Europa, mythological Greek princess, abducted byZeus in the form of a bull and gave birth toMinos, the first king of Crete. | DMP · 52 |
| 53 Kalypso | – | Calypso, anOceanid from Greek mythology, one of the many daughters of the TitansOceanus andTethys. Calypso keptOdysseus prisoner at Ogygia for seven years. | DMP · 53 |
| 54 Alexandra | – | Alexander von Humboldt (1769–1859), German explorer | DMP · 54 |
| 55 Pandora | – | Pandora, the first human woman in Greek mythology. She was created from clay byHephaestus at the request ofZeus. | DMP · 55 |
| 56 Melete | – | Melete, one of the three original muses before theNine Olympian Muses were founded. Her sisters wereAoide andMneme. | DMP · 56 |
| 57 Mnemosyne | – | Mnemosyne, the goddess of memory in Greek mythology . She is the mother of the nineMuses withZeus, and one of the 12 first-generationTitans, the children ofUranus (Father Sky) andGaea (Mother Earth). | DMP · 57 |
| 58 Concordia | – | Concordia, the Roman goddess of peace and concord. She is the daughter of Jupiter andThemis. | DMP · 58 |
| 59 Elpis | – | Elpis, the personification and spirit ofhope in Greek mythology. In the 1860s, there was a dispute about a new nomenclature proposed byUrbain Le Verrier who wanted to name this asteroid after its discoverer,Jean Chacornac (1823–1873). This was rejected by the community of astronomers. The asteroid was then named byKarl L. Littrow on a request byEdmund Weiss since Chacornac refused to submit a name (other than his own). The given name is an allusion to the "hope" that this dispute could be settled. | DMP · 59 |
| 60 Echo | – | Echo, anOread (mountain nymph) in Greek mythology, who, as a punishment, was only able to speak the last words spoken to her. When she fell in love withNarcissus, she was unable to tell him how she felt; and was forced to watch him as he fell in love with himself. | DMP · 60 |
| 61 Danaë | – | Danaë, daughter of kingAcrisius and mother of heroPerseus by Zeus in Greek mythology. Danaë was confined in a brass tower by her father to keep her a virgin. Zeus however, desired her, and came to her in the form of golden rain which streamed in through the roof of her confinement and down into her womb. | DMP · 61 |
| 62 Erato | – | Erato, theMuse of love poetry in Greek mythology. The nine Muses are the inspirational goddesses of literature, science, and the arts. They are the daughters ofZeus andMnemosyne. | DMP · 62 |
| 63 Ausonia | – | The country ofItaly, by its ancient Greek name for lower Italy, derived from king Auson, a son of Odysseus and Kallisto. The term "Ausones" was also applied by Greek writers to describe variousItalic peoples. | DMP · 63 |
| 64 Angelina | – | Astronomical station of Hungarian astronomerFranz Xaver von Zach (1754–1832), nearMarseilles in France | DMP · 64 |
| 65 Cybele | – | Cybele, mother goddess worshiped as "Mountain Mother" by thePhrygias, and adopted as "Great Mother" by the Greeks and Romans. This asteroid was originally named "Maximiliana", afterMaximilian II, king of Bavaria. This non-classical name, however, was rejected by several astronomers,also see(59). | DMP · 65 |
| 66 Maja | – | Maia, one of thePleiades, the seven daughters of TitanAtlas and Oceanid nymphPleione. Maia is the mother of the Olympian messenger godHermes. | DMP · 66 |
| 67 Asia | – | Asia, anOceanid from Greek mythology, one of the many daughters of the TitansOceanus andTethys. This was the first asteroid discovered in Asia. English astronomerN. R. Pogson discovered it atMadras Observatory, India, in April 1861. | DMP · 67 |
| 68 Leto | – | Leto, Goddess of motherhood in Greek mythology. She is the daughter of the TitansCoeus andPhoebe and the mother of Olympian godApollo and goddessArtemis. | DMP · 68 |
| 69 Hesperia | – | The country ofItaly (by its Greek name Hesperia; "setting Sun" or "evening"). This asteroid was discovered one month after theItalian unification was proclaimed on 17 March 1861. | DMP · 69 |
| 70 Panopaea | – | Panopaea, aNereid (sea nymph) from Greek mythology, one of the 50 daughters ofNereus andDoris. She was invoked by sailors during storms. | DMP · 70 |
| 71 Niobe | – | Niobe, daughter of kingTantalus in Greek mythology. The gods punished her by killing her seven sons and seven daughters and changing her into a rock. | DMP · 71 |
| 72 Feronia | – | Feronia, Roman goddess ofgroves, wildlife andfreedman | DMP · 72 |
| 73 Klytia | – | Clytie, anOceanid from Greek mythology, one of the many daughters of the TitansOceanus andTethys | DMP · 73 |
| 74 Galatea | – | Galatea, aNereid (sea nymph) from Greek mythology, one of the 50 daughters ofNereus andDoris, who loved the shepherdAcis. Alternatively, the name may refer to the statue of a woman created by sculptorPygmalion. | DMP · 74 |
| 75 Eurydike | – | Eurydice, an oaknymph and daughter ofApollo in Greek mythology. She was the wife ofOrpheus, who failed to bring her back from the dead. With his enchanting music he softened the hearts of the gods who let him descend into theunderworld under the condition that he must not look at her until both had reached the upper world. | DMP · 75 |
| 76 Freia | – | Freyja, the goddess of love and beauty inNorse mythology | DMP · 76 |
| 77 Frigga | – | Frigg, wife ofOdin and queen of all the gods inNorse mythology | DMP · 77 |
| 78 Diana | – | Diana, goddess of the hunt in Roman mythology. She is the daughter of Jupiter andLatona. Her Greek counterpart isArtemis. | DMP · 78 |
| 79 Eurynome | – | Eurynome, anOceanid from Greek mythology, one of the many daughters of the TitansOceanus andTethys. | DMP · 79 |
| 80 Sappho | – | Sappho (c. 630 – c. 570 BC), Greek poet who, according to mythology, killed herself by jumping off the cliffs for love of the ferrymanPhaon. | DMP · 80 |
| 81 Terpsichore | – | Terpsichore, theMuse of dance and chorus in Greek mythology. The nine Muses are the inspirational goddesses of literature, science, and the arts. They are the daughters ofZeus andMnemosyne. | DMP · 81 |
| 82 Alkmene | – | Alcmene, mother of the divine heroHeracles in Greek mythology.Zeus slept with Alcmene disguised as her husbandAmphitryon. | DMP · 82 |
| 83 Beatrix | – | Beatrice Portinari (1265–1290), beloved of Italian poetDante Alighieri | DMP · 83 |
| 84 Klio | – | Clio, theMuse of history in Greek mythology. The nine Muses are the inspirational goddesses of literature, science, and the arts. They are the daughters ofZeus andMnemosyne. | DMP · 84 |
| 85 Io | – | Io, daughter ofInachus, king of Argos, and one of the mortal lovers ofZeus in Greek mythology. | DMP · 85 |
| 86 Semele | – | Semele, the youngest daughter of kingCadmus and the mother ofDionysus by Zeus in Greek mythology | DMP · 86 |
| 87 Sylvia | – | Rhea Sylvia, the mythical mother of the twinsRomulus and Remus from Roman mythology (Src). Alternatively, it was named afterSylvie Petiaux-Hugo Flammarion, first wife of French astronomerCamille Flammarion (1842–1925) | DMP · 87 |
| 88 Thisbe | – | Thisbe, lover of Pyramus in Classical mythology. The two Babylonian lovers are also prominent in the comedyA Midsummer Night's Dream by Shakespeare. | DMP · 88 |
| 89 Julia | – | Julia of Corsica (c. died 439), a virgin martyr who is venerated as a Christian saint. | DMP · 89 |
| 90 Antiope | – | Antiope, anAmazon and daughter ofAres in Greek mythology. Alternatively, she was the daughter ofNycteus, king of Thebes, and the lover ofZeus. This minor planet is likely the first double asteroid ever discovered. | DMP · 90 |
| 91 Aegina | – | Aegina, daughter of the river-godAsopus and the river-nymphMetope. She was changed into the island ofAegina by Zeus. | DMP · 91 |
| 92 Undina | – | Heroine of the fairy-tale novellaUndine by German writerFriedrich de la Motte Fouqué (1777–1843) | DMP · 92 |
| 93 Minerva | – | Minerva, goddess of wisdom and strategic warfare and daughter ofJupiter andMetis in Roman mythology. Her Greek equivalent isAthena. | DMP · 93 |
| 94 Aurora | – | Aurora, goddess of the dawn in Roman mythology. Her Greek counterpart isEos, who is the daughter of the TitansHyperion andTheia. | DMP · 94 |
| 95 Arethusa | – | Arethusa, one of the sevenHesperides, nymph daughters of the TitansAtlas andHesperis | DMP · 95 |
| 96 Aegle | – | Aegle, one of the sevenHesperides, nymph daughters of the TitansAtlas andHesperis | DMP · 96 |
| 97 Klotho | – | Clotho (Klotho), one of the Three Fates orMoirai who spin (Clotho), draw out (Lachesis) and cut (Atropos) the thread of Life in ancient Greek mythology. | DMP · 97 |
| 98 Ianthe | – | Ianthe, a girl who married Iphis afterIsis turned Iphis from a woman into a man. Alternatively, she was anOceanid from Greek mythology, one of the many daughters of the TitansOceanus andTethys. | DMP · 98 |
| 99 Dike | – | Dike, minor Greek goddess of human justice and the spirit of moral order, daughter ofZeus andThemis | DMP · 99 |
| 100 Hekate | – | Hecate, Greek goddess (The name "Hecate" also sounds like Greekhekaton meaning "one hundred.") | DMP · 100 |
| Named minor planet | Provisional | This minor planet was named for... | Ref · Catalog |
|---|---|---|---|
| 101 Helena | – | Helen of Troy, the most beautiful woman in the world in Greek mythology. The wife of kingMenelaus of Sparta was abducted byParis which led to theTrojan War. | DMP · 101 |
| 102 Miriam | – | Miriam, Biblical prophetess | DMP · 102 |
| 103 Hera | – | Hera, Greek goddess of marriage, childbirth, and family. She is the daughter of the TitansCronus andRhea, and sister and wife ofZeus. | DMP · 103 |
| 104 Klymene | – | One of various Greek figures namedClymene | DMP · 104 |
| 105 Artemis | – | Artemis, Greek goddess of the hunt, forests, and the Moon. She was the daughter ofZeus byLeto and twin sister ofApollo. Her Roman equivalent isDiana. | DMP · 105 |
| 106 Dione | – | Dione, anOceanid from Greek mythology, one of the many daughters of the TitansOceanus andTethys. She was one of the wives ofZeus and mother ofAphrodite, the goddess of love, beauty and sexuality. | DMP · 106 |
| 107 Camilla | – | Camilla, queen of theVolsci from Roman mythology. Less likely, the name refers to French astronomerCamille Flammarion (1842–1925). | DMP · 107 |
| 108 Hecuba | – | Hecuba, wife of KingPriam during theTrojan War in Greek mythology | DMP · 108 |
| 109 Felicitas | – | Felicitas, goddess of happiness in Roman mythology. She is often portrayed holding acaduceus (staff) and acornucopia (horn of plenty). | DMP · 109 |
| 110 Lydia | – | Lydia, ancient region of Asia Minor | DMP · 110 |
| 111 Ate | – | Atë, goddess of mischief, delusion, ruin, and folly in Greek mythology. She is the daughter ofZeus or ofEris. | DMP · 111 |
| 112 Iphigenia | – | Iphigenia, mythological Greek princess | DMP · 112 |
| 113 Amalthea | – | Amalthea, mythological Greek nursemaid | DMP · 113 |
| 114 Kassandra | – | Cassandra, mythological Trojan prophetess | DMP · 114 |
| 115 Thyra | – | Thyra, wife of KingGorm of Denmark | DMP · 115 |
| 116 Sirona | – | Sirona, Celtic goddess | DMP · 116 |
| 117 Lomia | – | Misspelling ofLamia queen of Libya, lover ofZeus | DMP · 117 |
| 118 Peitho | – | Peitho, Greek goddess | DMP · 118 |
| 119 Althaea | – | Althaea, Greek mother ofMeleager | DMP · 119 |
| 120 Lachesis | – | Lachesis, one of the Three Fates orMoirai who spin (Clotho), draw out (Lachesis) and cut (Atropos) the thread of Life in ancient Greek mythology. | DMP · 120 |
| 121 Hermione | – | Hermione, mythological Greek princess | DMP · 121 |
| 122 Gerda | – | Gerðr, Norse goddess | DMP · 122 |
| 123 Brunhild | – | Brünnehilde, Norse Valkyrie | DMP · 123 |
| 124 Alkeste | – | Alcestis, mythological Greek woman | DMP · 124 |
| 125 Liberatrix | – | PossiblyAdolphe Thiers (1797–1877), French president during theFranco-Prussian War. Also possiblyJoan of Arc. | DMP · 125 |
| 126 Velleda | – | Veleda, Germanic priestess, leader of Batavian uprising against theRomans | DMP · 126 |
| 127 Johanna | – | Joan of Arc (1412–1431), saint and heroine of France | DMP · 127 |
| 128 Nemesis | – | Nemesis, Greek goddess | DMP · 128 |
| 129 Antigone | – | Antigone, mythological Greek princess | DMP · 129 |
| 130 Elektra | – | Electra, mythological Greek princess | DMP · 130 |
| 131 Vala | – | Völva, mythological Norse prophetess | DMP · 131 |
| 132 Aethra | – | Aethra, Greek mother of Theseus | DMP · 132 |
| 133 Cyrene | – | Cyrene, Greek lover of Apollo | DMP · 133 |
| 134 Sophrosyne | – | Sophrosyne, Plato's concept of moderation | DMP · 134 |
| 135 Hertha | – | Nerthus (Hertha), Norse goddess,also see(601) Nerthus | DMP · 135 |
| 136 Austria | – | Austria, country | DMP · 136 |
| 137 Meliboea | – | Meliboea, various Greek figures | DMP · 137 |
| 138 Tolosa | – | Latin forToulouse, France | DMP · 138 |
| 139 Juewa | – | Chinese for 'Star of China's Fortune' | DMP · 139 |
| 140 Siwa | – | Siwa, Slavic goddess | DMP · 140 |
| 141 Lumen | – | Lumen : Récits de l'infini, book byCamille Flammarion (1842–1925) | DMP · 141 |
| 142 Polana | – | Pula, city now inCroatia | DMP · 142 |
| 143 Adria | – | Adriatic Sea | DMP · 143 |
| 144 Vibilia | – | Vibilia, Roman goddess and patroness of journeyings | DMP · 144 |
| 145 Adeona | – | Adeona, Roman goddess and patroness of homecomings | DMP · 145 |
| 146 Lucina | – | Lucina, Roman goddess | DMP · 146 |
| 147 Protogeneia | – | Protogeneia, mythological Greek princess | DMP · 147 |
| 148 Gallia | – | Gaul, Roman province | DMP · 148 |
| 149 Medusa | – | Medusa, mythological Greek monster | DMP · 149 |
| 150 Nuwa | – | Nüwa, Chinese mythological figure | DMP · 150 |
| 151 Abundantia | – | Abundantia, Roman goddess | DMP · 151 |
| 152 Atala | – | Atala, eponymous hero of novel byFrançois-René de Chateaubriand | DMP · 152 |
| 153 Hilda | – | Daughter of Austrian astronomerTheodor von Oppolzer (1841–1886) | DMP · 153 |
| 154 Bertha | – | Berthe Martin-Flammarion, sister of French astronomerCamille Flammarion (1842–1925) | DMP · 154 |
| 155 Scylla | – | Scylla, Greek mythological monster | DMP · 155 |
| 156 Xanthippe | – | Xanthippe, wife ofSocrates | DMP · 156 |
| 157 Dejanira | – | Deianira, mythological Greek princess | DMP · 157 |
| 158 Koronis | – | Coronis, various Greek figures | DMP · 158 |
| 159 Aemilia | – | Via Aemilia, Roman road | DMP · 159 |
| 160 Una | – | Una, character inEdmund Spenser'sThe Faerie Queene | DMP · 160 |
| 161 Athor | – | Hathor, Egyptian goddess | DMP · 161 |
| 162 Laurentia | – | Joseph Jean Pierre Laurent (died 1900), French amateur astronomer | DMP · 162 |
| 163 Erigone | – | Erigone, various Greek figures | DMP · 163 |
| 164 Eva | – | unknown origin of name; it may refer toEve. | DMP · 164 |
| 165 Loreley | – | TheLorelei, character inGerman folklore | DMP · 165 |
| 166 Rhodope | – | Queen Rhodope, Greek mythology | DMP · 166 |
| 167 Urda | – | Urd, NorseNorn | DMP · 167 |
| 168 Sibylla | – | TheSibyls, Greek prophetesses | DMP · 168 |
| 169 Zelia | – | Niece of French astronomerCamille Flammarion (1842–1925) | DMP · 169 |
| 170 Maria | – | Maria, sister of Italian astronomerAntonio Abetti (1846–1928) | DMP · 170 |
| 171 Ophelia | – | Ophelia, character in Shakespeare'sHamlet | DMP · 171 |
| 172 Baucis | – | Baucis, Greek mythological woman | DMP · 172 |
| 173 Ino | – | Ino, mythological Greek woman | DMP · 173 |
| 174 Phaedra | – | Phaedra, Greek mythological woman | DMP · 174 |
| 175 Andromache | – | Andromache, Trojan wife ofHector | DMP · 175 |
| 176 Iduna | – | Ydun, a club that hosted an astronomical conference inStockholm, Sweden (the club was probably named afterIduna, a Norse goddess) | DMP · 176 |
| 177 Irma | – | unknown origin of name | DMP · 177 |
| 178 Belisana | – | Belisana, Celtic goddess | DMP · 178 |
| 179 Klytaemnestra | – | Clytemnestra, Greek mythological queen | DMP · 179 |
| 180 Garumna | – | Ancient name for riverGaronne, France | DMP · 180 |
| 181 Eucharis | – | Eucharis, Greek nymph | DMP · 181 |
| 182 Elsa | – | Elsbeth – the Austrian variant of "Elisabeth" a common female first name – and only later changed into a more lyrical "Elsa" with the consent of the discoverer,Johann Palisa. It may also refer to theEmpress Elisabeth of Austria (1854–1898), or other person or characters. | DMP · 182 |
| 183 Istria | – | Istria, peninsula in Croatia and Slovenia | DMP · 183 |
| 184 Dejopeja | – | Deiopaea, Roman nymph | DMP · 184 |
| 185 Eunike | – | Eunice (Eunike), aNereid (sea nymph) from Greek mythology, one of the 50 daughters ofNereus andDoris, whose name means "happy victory". It was chosen to commemorate theTreaty of San Stefano, which was signed two days after the discovery of this asteroid byC. H. F. Peters in March 1878. | DMP · 185 |
| 186 Celuta | – | Celuta, the main character in the short novellaRené by French authorFrançois-René de Chateaubriand (1768–1848) | DMP · 186 |
| 187 Lamberta | – | Johann Heinrich Lambert (1728–1777), Swiss polymath | DMP · 187 |
| 188 Menippe | – | Menippe, Greek daughter ofOrion | DMP · 188 |
| 189 Phthia | – | Phthia, various Greek figures and places | DMP · 189 |
| 190 Ismene | – | Ismene, Greek daughter ofOedipus | DMP · 190 |
| 191 Kolga | – | Kólga, daughter ofÆgir in Norse mythology | DMP · 191 |
| 192 Nausikaa | – | Nausicaa, mythological Greek princess | DMP · 192 |
| 193 Ambrosia | – | Ambrosia, Greek food of the gods | DMP · 193 |
| 194 Prokne | – | Procne, sister ofPhilomela in Greek mythology | DMP · 194 |
| 195 Eurykleia | – | Eurycleia, Greek nurse ofOdysseus | DMP · 195 |
| 196 Philomela | – | Philomela, sister ofProcne in Greek mythology | DMP · 196 |
| 197 Arete | – | Arete, Greek mother ofNausicaa | DMP · 197 |
| 198 Ampella | – | Ampelos, Greek friend ofDionysus | DMP · 198 |
| 199 Byblis | – | Byblis, Greek mythological woman | DMP · 199 |
| 200 Dynamene | – | Dynamene, aNereid (sea nymph) from Greek mythology, one of the 50 daughters ofNereus andDoris. | DMP · 200 |
| Named minor planet | Provisional | This minor planet was named for... | Ref · Catalog |
|---|---|---|---|
| 201 Penelope | – | Penelope, Greek wife ofOdysseus | DMP · 201 |
| 202 Chryseïs | – | Chryseis, mythological Trojan woman | DMP · 202 |
| 203 Pompeja | – | Pompeii, ruined Roman town | DMP · 203 |
| 204 Kallisto | – | Callisto, Greek nymph | DMP · 204 |
| 205 Martha | – | Martha, woman in theNew Testament | DMP · 205 |
| 206 Hersilia | – | Hersilia, Roman wife ofRomulus | DMP · 206 |
| 207 Hedda | – | Hedwig, wife of German astronomerFriedrich August Theodor Winnecke (1835–1897) | DMP · 207 |
| 208 Lacrimosa | – | Our Lady of Sorrows, a title referring toMary, the mother of Jesus | DMP · 208 |
| 209 Dido | – | Dido, mythological Carthaginian queen | DMP · 209 |
| 210 Isabella | – | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 210 |
| 211 Isolda | – | Isolde, heroine of the legend ofTristan and Iseult | DMP · 211 |
| 212 Medea | – | Medea, Greek mythological witch | DMP · 212 |
| 213 Lilaea | – | Lilaea, Greek Naiad | DMP · 213 |
| 214 Aschera | – | Astarte (Aschera, Astoreth),Sidonian and Phoenician goddess of love and fertility,also see(672) | DMP · 214 |
| 215 Oenone | – | Oenone, Greek nymph | DMP · 215 |
| 216 Kleopatra | – | Cleopatra (69–30 BC), Queen of Egypt | DMP · 216 |
| 217 Eudora | – | Eudora, GreekHyad | DMP · 217 |
| 218 Bianca | – | Bianca Bianchi, stage name of the German opera singerBertha Schwarz (1855–1947) | DMP · 218 |
| 219 Thusnelda | – | Thusnelda, wife of Germanic warriorArminius | DMP · 219 |
| 220 Stephania | – | Princess Stéphanie of Belgium (1864–1945) | DMP · 220 |
| 221 Eos | – | Eos, Greek goddess | DMP · 221 |
| 222 Lucia | – | Lucia, daughter of Austrian explorerCount Johann Nepomuk Wilczek (1837–1922) | DMP · 222 |
| 223 Rosa | – | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 223 |
| 224 Oceana | – | ThePacific Ocean | DMP · 224 |
| 225 Henrietta | – | Henrietta, wife of French astronomerPierre Janssen (1824–1907) | DMP · 225 |
| 226 Weringia | – | Währing, part ofVienna | DMP · 226 |
| 227 Philosophia | – | Philosophy | DMP · 227 |
| 228 Agathe | – | Agathe, daughter of Austrian astronomerTheodor von Oppolzer (1841–1886) | DMP · 228 |
| 229 Adelinda | – | Adelinde Weiss (née Fenzel), wife of Austrian astronomerEdmund Weiss (1837–1917), director of theVienna Observatory where this asteroid was discovered byJohann Palisa;also see(265),(266), and(583). | DMP · 229 |
| 230 Athamantis | – | Athamantis, Greek daughter ofAthamas | DMP · 230 |
| 231 Vindobona | – | Latin name forVienna, Austria | DMP · 231 |
| 232 Russia | – | Russia, country | DMP · 232 |
| 233 Asterope | – | Sterope, Greek Pleiad | DMP · 233 |
| 234 Barbara | – | Saint Barbara | DMP · 234 |
| 235 Carolina | – | Caroline Island, now part ofKiribati | DMP · 235 |
| 236 Honoria | – | Honoria, Roman goddess | DMP · 236 |
| 237 Coelestina | – | Coelestine, wife of Austrian astronomerTheodor von Oppolzer (1841–1886) | DMP · 237 |
| 238 Hypatia | – | Hypatia (c. 350–415), Greek philosopher | DMP · 238 |
| 239 Adrastea | – | Adrasteia, Greek goddess | DMP · 239 |
| 240 Vanadis | – | Vanadis, Norse goddess | DMP · 240 |
| 241 Germania | – | Latin name for Germany | DMP · 241 |
| 242 Kriemhild | – | Kriemhild, mythological Germanic princess | DMP · 242 |
| 243 Ida | – | Ida, Cretan nymph, after whomMount Ida is named, where the mythicaldactyls lived ((243) Ida I Dactyl) | DMP · 243 |
| 244 Sita | – | Sita, Hindu wife ofRama | DMP · 244 |
| 245 Vera | – | Unknown origin of name. The asteroid's name was suggested by the wife of the discoverer,N. R. Pogson (1829–1891) | DMP · 245 |
| 246 Asporina | – | Asporina, goddess worshipped inAsia Minor | DMP · 246 |
| 247 Eukrate | – | Eukrate, aNereid (sea nymph) from Greek mythology, one of the 50 daughters ofNereus andDoris. | DMP · 247 |
| 248 Lameia | – | Lamia, lover of Zeus | DMP · 248 |
| 249 Ilse | – | Ilse, legendary German princess | DMP · 249 |
| 250 Bettina | – | Bettina Caroline de Rothschild (1858–1892),[1] Austrian Baroness and wife ofAlbert Salomon Anselm von Rothschild, who named the asteroid after her. The discoverer,Johann Palisa, reportedly sold the naming rights for 50 pounds in order to help fund his expedition to observe the totalsolar eclipse of August 29, 1886. | DMP · 250 |
| 251 Sophia | – | Sophia, wife of German astronomerHugo von Seeliger (1849–1924) | DMP · 251 |
| 252 Clementina | – | Unknown origin of name. The asteroid was named by its discoverer,Henri Joseph Anastase Perrotin (1845–1904) | DMP · 252 |
| 253 Mathilde | – | Mathilde, wife of French astronomerMaurice Loewy (1833–1907) | DMP · 253 |
| 254 Augusta | – | Auguste von Littrow (1819–1890), author, and champion of women's rights; wife of Austrian astronomerCarl Ludwig von Littrow | DMP · 254 |
| 255 Oppavia | – | Opava, nowCzech Republic | DMP · 255 |
| 256 Walpurga | – | Saint Walpurga | DMP · 256 |
| 257 Silesia | – | Silesia, region of central Europe | DMP · 257 |
| 258 Tyche | – | Tyche, Greek goddess | DMP · 258 |
| 259 Aletheia | – | Veritas (Aletheia), Greek goddess | DMP · 259 |
| 260 Huberta | – | SaintHubertus | DMP · 260 |
| 261 Prymno | – | Prymno, one of theOceanids, daughters of the Titans Oceanus and Tethys in Greek mythology | DMP · 261 |
| 262 Valda | – | Unknown origin of name. The asteroid's name was proposed by the Baroness Bettina Caroline de Rothschild,see(250) | DMP · 262 |
| 263 Dresda | – | The city ofDresden in Germany | DMP · 263 |
| 264 Libussa | – | Libussa, legendary founder ofPrague | DMP · 264 |
| 265 Anna | – | Anny Weiss (née Kretschmar), daughter-in-law of Austrian astronomerEdmund Weiss (1837–1917), director of theVienna Observatory where this asteroid was discovered byJohann Palisa;also see(229) and(266) | DMP · 265 |
| 266 Aline | – | Linda von Schuster (née Weiss), daughter of Austrian astronomerEdmund Weiss (1837–1917), director of theVienna Observatory where this asteroid was discovered byJohann Palisa;also see(229) and(265) | DMP · 266 |
| 267 Tirza | – | Tirzah, Biblical figure | DMP · 267 |
| 268 Adorea | – | Adorea, Roman cake | DMP · 268 |
| 269 Justitia | – | Justitia orThemis, Greek goddess | DMP · 269 |
| 270 Anahita | – | Anahita, Persian goddess | DMP · 270 |
| 271 Penthesilea | – | Penthesilea, mythological Amazon queen | DMP · 271 |
| 272 Antonia | – | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 272 |
| 273 Atropos | – | Atropos, one of the Three Fates orMoirai who spin (Clotho), draw out (Lachesis) and cut (Atropos) the thread of Life in ancient Greek mythology. | DMP · 273 |
| 274 Philagoria | – | Philagoria, recreation club inOlomouc | DMP · 274 |
| 275 Sapientia | – | Latin for wisdom | DMP · 275 |
| 276 Adelheid | – | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 276 |
| 277 Elvira | – | Character in books byAlphonse de Lamartine (1790–1869) | DMP · 277 |
| 278 Paulina | – | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 278 |
| 279 Thule | – | Thule, mythical northern land (usually identified withScandinavia) | DMP · 279 |
| 280 Philia | – | Philia, Greek nymph | DMP · 280 |
| 281 Lucretia | – | Caroline Herschel (1750–1848), German astronomer | DMP · 281 |
| 282 Clorinde | – | Clorinda, heroine ofTorquato Tasso's poemJerusalem Delivered | DMP · 282 |
| 283 Emma | – | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 283 |
| 284 Amalia | – | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 284 |
| 285 Regina | – | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 285 |
| 286 Iclea | – | Icléa, heroine of French astronomerCamille Flammarion's novelUranie | DMP · 286 |
| 287 Nephthys | – | Nephthys, Egyptian goddess | DMP · 287 |
| 288 Glauke | – | Glauke, Greek daughter ofCreon | DMP · 288 |
| 289 Nenetta | – | French slang for a frivolous woman | DMP · 289 |
| 290 Bruna | – | Brno, nowCzech Republic | DMP · 290 |
| 291 Alice | – | Unknown origin of name. The asteroid was named by theFrench Astronomical Society (French:Société astronomique de France). | DMP · 291 |
| 292 Ludovica | – | Unknown origin of name. The asteroid was named by theFrench Astronomical Society (French:Société astronomique de France). | DMP · 292 |
| 293 Brasilia | – | Brazil, country | DMP · 293 |
| 294 Felicia | – | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 294 |
| 295 Theresia | – | Unknown origin of name. Previously, the name was erroneously attributed toMaria Theresa (1717–1780), Holy Roman Empress and queen of Hungary and Bohemia. | DMP · 295 |
| 296 Phaëtusa | – | Phaethusa, Greek goddess | DMP · 296 |
| 297 Caecilia | – | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 297 |
| 298 Baptistina | – | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 298 |
| 299 Thora | – | Thor, god of thunder, weather and storms inNorse mythology | DMP · 299 |
| 300 Geraldina | – | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 300 |
| Named minor planet | Provisional | This minor planet was named for... | Ref · Catalog |
|---|---|---|---|
| 301 Bavaria | – | Bavaria, region of Germany | DMP · 301 |
| 302 Clarissa | – | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 302 |
| 303 Josephina | – | DiscovererElia Millosevich simply stated "in homage to a person dear to me" | DMP · 303 |
| 304 Olga | – | Olga, niece of German astronomerFriedrich Wilhelm Argelander (1799–1875) | DMP · 304 |
| 305 Gordonia | – | James Gordon Bennett Jr. (1841–1918), editor of theNew York Herald, founded by his father | DMP · 305 |
| 306 Unitas | – | Book by Italian astronomerAngelo Secchi (1818–1878); also named for the unity of Italy | DMP · 306 |
| 307 Nike | – | Nike, Greek goddess | DMP · 307 |
| 308 Polyxo | – | Polyxo, GreekHyad | DMP · 308 |
| 309 Fraternitas | – | Latin forfraternity | DMP · 309 |
| 310 Margarita | – | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 310 |
| 311 Claudia | – | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 311 |
| 312 Pierretta | – | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 312 |
| 313 Chaldaea | – | Chaldea,Babylonian nation | DMP · 313 |
| 314 Rosalia | – | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 314 |
| 315 Constantia | – | Constancy | DMP · 315 |
| 316 Goberta | – | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 316 |
| 317 Roxane | – | Roxana (c. 340–310 BC), wife ofAlexander the Great | DMP · 317 |
| 318 Magdalena | – | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 318 |
| 319 Leona | – | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 319 |
| 320 Katharina | – | Mother of discovererJohann Palisa (1848–1925) | DMP · 320 |
| 321 Florentina | – | Florentine, daughter of the discoverer, Austrian astronomerJohann Palisa | DMP · 321 |
| 322 Phaeo | – | Phaeo, GreekHyad | DMP · 322 |
| 323 Brucia | – | Catherine Wolfe Bruce (1816–1900), American patron of astronomy | DMP · 323 |
| 324 Bamberga | – | Bamberg, Germany | DMP · 324 |
| 325 Heidelberga | – | Heidelberg, Germany | DMP · 325 |
| 326 Tamara | – | Tamar of Georgia (c. 1160–1213), queen ofGeorgia | DMP · 326 |
| 327 Columbia | – | Christopher Columbus (1451–1506), an Italian explorer, navigator, who initiated the permanentEuropean colonization of the Americas | DMP · 327 |
| 328 Gudrun | – | Gudrun, Norse wife ofSigurd | DMP · 328 |
| 329 Svea | – | Sweden | DMP · 329 |
| 330 Adalberta | A910 CB | Adalbert Merx (1838–1909), German Protestant theologian and orientalist; father-in-law of the discoverer,Max Wolf | DMP · 330 |
| 331 Etheridgea | – | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 331 |
| 332 Siri | – | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 332 |
| 333 Badenia | 1892 A | Baden, region of Germany | DMP · 333 |
| 334 Chicago | 1892 L | Chicago, United States | DMP · 334 |
| 335 Roberta | 1892 C | Carl Robert Osten-Sacken (1828–1906), Baltic-German diplomat and entomologist | DMP · 335 |
| 336 Lacadiera | 1892 D | La Cadière-d'Azur, village inVar, France | DMP · 336 |
| 337 Devosa | 1892 E | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 337 |
| 338 Budrosa | 1892 F | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 338 |
| 339 Dorothea | 1892 G | Dorothea Klumpke (1861–1942), American astronomer | DMP · 339 |
| 340 Eduarda | 1892 H | Heinrich Eduard von Lade (1817–1904), German banker and amateur astronomer | DMP · 340 |
| 341 California | 1892 J | California, US state | DMP · 341 |
| 342 Endymion | 1892 K | Endymion, Greek mythology | DMP · 342 |
| 343 Ostara | 1892 N | Ostara, Old High German name forEostre, the Anglo-Saxon goddess of spring, reconstructed byJacob Grimm in hisDeutsche Mythologie | DMP · 343 |
| 344 Desiderata | 1892 M | Désirée Clary (1777–1860), Queen of Sweden and Norway | DMP · 344 |
| 345 Tercidina | 1892 O | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 345 |
| 346 Hermentaria | 1892 P | Herment, village inPuy-de-Dôme, France | DMP · 346 |
| 347 Pariana | 1892 Q | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 347 |
| 348 May | 1892 R | Karl May (1842–1912), German author | DMP · 348 |
| 349 Dembowska | 1892 T | Ercole Dembowski (1812–1881), Italian astronomer | DMP · 349 |
| 350 Ornamenta | 1892 U | Antoinette Horneman fromScheveningen, daughter of a Dutch mariner. She was a very zealous member of theSociété astronomique de France | DMP · 350 |
| 351 Yrsa | 1892 V | Unknown origin of name; it may refer toYrsa, queen inNorse mythology | DMP · 351 |
| 352 Gisela | 1893 B | Gisela Wolf, wife of the discoverer,Max Wolf (1863–1932) | DMP · 352 |
| 353 Ruperto-Carola | 1893 F | Ruprecht Karls University of Heidelberg | DMP · 353 |
| 354 Eleonora | 1893 A | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 354 |
| 355 Gabriella | 1893 E | Gabrielle Flammarion (1877–1962), French astronomer | DMP · 355 |
| 356 Liguria | 1893 G | Liguria, region of Italy | DMP · 356 |
| 357 Ninina | 1893 J | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 357 |
| 358 Apollonia | 1893 K | Apollonia, Ancient Greek colony inIllyria | DMP · 358 |
| 359 Georgia | 1893 M | KingGeorge II of Great Britain (1683–1760) | DMP · 359 |
| 360 Carlova | 1893 N | Unknown origin of name; cf. discovererCharlois | DMP · 360 |
| 361 Bononia | 1893 P | Latin name forBologna, Italy, and forBoulogne-sur-Mer, France | DMP · 361 |
| 362 Havnia | 1893 R | Latin name forCopenhagen, Denmark | DMP · 362 |
| 363 Padua | 1893 S | Padua, Italy | DMP · 363 |
| 364 Isara | 1893 T | RiverIsère, France | DMP · 364 |
| 365 Corduba | 1893 V | Latin name forCórdoba, Spain | DMP · 365 |
| 366 Vincentina | 1893 W | Vincenzo Cerulli (1859–1927), Italian astronomer | DMP · 366 |
| 367 Amicitia | 1893 AA | Latin forfriendship | DMP · 367 |
| 368 Haidea | 1893 AB | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 368 |
| 369 Aëria | 1893 AE | Air, one of the fourclassical elements | DMP · 369 |
| 370 Modestia | 1893 AC | Modesty | DMP · 370 |
| 371 Bohemia | 1893 AD | Bohemia, region ofCzech Republic | DMP · 371 |
| 372 Palma | 1893 AH | Palma de Mallorca, Spain | DMP · 372 |
| 373 Melusina | 1893 AJ | ProbablyMelusine, mythological French mermaid, associated with the origins of theLusignan dynasty | DMP · 373 |
| 374 Burgundia | 1893 AK | Burgundy, region of France | DMP · 374 |
| 375 Ursula | 1893 AL | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 375 |
| 376 Geometria | 1893 AM | Geometry | DMP · 376 |
| 377 Campania | 1893 AN | Campania, region of Italy | DMP · 377 |
| 378 Holmia | 1893 AP | Latin name forStockholm, Sweden | DMP · 378 |
| 379 Huenna | 1894 AQ | Latin name forHven, Swedish island | DMP · 379 |
| 380 Fiducia | 1894 AR | Latin forconfidence | DMP · 380 |
| 381 Myrrha | 1894 AS | Myrrha, Greek mythological princess | DMP · 381 |
| 382 Dodona | 1894 AT | Dodona (now Dodoni), Greece | DMP · 382 |
| 383 Janina | 1894 AU | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 383 |
| 384 Burdigala | 1894 AV | Latin name forBordeaux, France | DMP · 384 |
| 385 Ilmatar | 1894 AX | Ilmatar, Finnish goddess | DMP · 385 |
| 386 Siegena | 1894 AY | Siegen, Germany | DMP · 386 |
| 387 Aquitania | 1894 AZ | Aquitaine, region of France | DMP · 387 |
| 388 Charybdis | 1894 BA | Charybdis, mythological Greek monster | DMP · 388 |
| 389 Industria | 1894 BB | Latin fordiligence | DMP · 389 |
| 390 Alma | 1894 BC | Alma River on the Crimean peninsula | DMP · 390 |
| 391 Ingeborg | 1894 BE | Unknown origin of name; it may refer toIngeborg fromNorse mythology | DMP · 391 |
| 392 Wilhelmina | 1894 BF | QueenWilhelmina of the Netherlands (1880–1962) | DMP · 392 |
| 393 Lampetia | 1894 BG | Lampetia, various Greek figures | DMP · 393 |
| 394 Arduina | 1894 BH | Arduinna, Gaulish goddess | DMP · 394 |
| 395 Delia | 1894 BK | Alternative name for the Greek goddessArtemis | DMP · 395 |
| 396 Aeolia | 1894 BL | Aeolis or Aeolia, an ancient region ofAsia Minor; or, theAeolian Islands, Italy | DMP · 396 |
| 397 Vienna | 1894 BM | Vienna, Austria | DMP · 397 |
| 398 Admete | 1894 BN | Admete, Greek mythological woman | DMP · 398 |
| 399 Persephone | 1895 BP | Persephone, Greek goddess | DMP · 399 |
| 400 Ducrosa | 1895 BU | J. Ducros, French mechanician atNice Observatory | DMP · 400 |
| Named minor planet | Provisional | This minor planet was named for... | Ref · Catalog |
|---|---|---|---|
| 401 Ottilia | 1895 BT | Ottilia, character inGerman folklore | DMP · 401 |
| 402 Chloë | 1895 BW | Chloe, shepherdess from Greek mythology | DMP · 402 |
| 403 Cyane | 1895 BX | Cyane, a nymph from Greek mythology | DMP · 403 |
| 404 Arsinoë | 1895 BY | Arsinoe, mother ofOrestes from Greek mythology | DMP · 404 |
| 405 Thia | 1895 BZ | Theia, one of the twelveTitans from Greek mythology | DMP · 405 |
| 406 Erna | 1895 CB | Erna Bidschof, granddaughter of Austrian astronomerJohann Palisa (1848–1925) | DMP · 406 |
| 407 Arachne | 1895 CC | Arachne, Greek mythological woman | DMP · 407 |
| 408 Fama | 1895 CD | Pheme (Fama), Roman goddess | DMP · 408 |
| 409 Aspasia | 1895 CE | Aspasia (c. 470–400 BC), mistress ofPericles, Greek statesman and general of Athens during its golden age | DMP · 409 |
| 410 Chloris | 1896 CH | Chloris, Greek goddess | DMP · 410 |
| 411 Xanthe | 1896 CJ | Xanthe, anOceanid (sea nymph) from Greek mythology. The numerous Oceanids are the daughters ofOceanus andTethys (Titans). | DMP · 411 |
| 412 Elisabetha | 1896 CK | Elise Wolf (1840–1924), mother of the discovererMax Wolf | DMP · 412 |
| 413 Edburga | 1896 CL | unknown origin of name | DMP · 413 |
| 414 Liriope | 1896 CN | Liriope, mother ofNarcissus from Greek mythology | DMP · 414 |
| 415 Palatia | 1896 CO | TheElectorate of the Palatinate, region of Germany | DMP · 415 |
| 416 Vaticana | 1896 CS | Vatican Hill, Rome | DMP · 416 |
| 417 Suevia | 1896 CT | Suevia, afraternity ofHeidelberg University | DMP · 417 |
| 418 Alemannia | 1896 CV | Alemannia, afraternity ofHeidelberg University | DMP · 418 |
| 419 Aurelia | 1896 CW | unknown origin of name | DMP · 419 |
| 420 Bertholda | 1896 CY | Berthold I of Zähringen (c. 1000–1078), Margrave ofBaden | DMP · 420 |
| 421 Zähringia | 1896 CZ | TheZähringen family ofBaden | DMP · 421 |
| 422 Berolina | 1896 DA | Berolina, Latin name for the city ofBerlin, Germany | DMP · 422 |
| 423 Diotima | 1896 DB | Diotima of Mantinea, Greek teacher ofSocrates | DMP · 423 |
| 424 Gratia | 1896 DF | TheGraces, Roman mythology | DMP · 424 |
| 425 Cornelia | 1896 DC | Cornelia Africana, daughter ofScipio Africanus | DMP · 425 |
| 426 Hippo | 1897 DH | Hippo Regius, nowAnnaba, ancient town in Algeria | DMP · 426 |
| 427 Galene | 1897 DJ | Galene, aNereid (sea nymph) from Greek mythology, one of the 50 daughters ofNereus andDoris. | DMP · 427 |
| 428 Monachia | 1897 DK | Monachia, Latin name for the German city ofMunich | DMP · 428 |
| 429 Lotis | 1897 DL | Lotis, a nymph in Greek mythology | DMP · 429 |
| 430 Hybris | 1897 DM | Hubris, Greek goddess | DMP · 430 |
| 431 Nephele | 1897 DN | Nephele, a nymph in Greek mythology | DMP · 431 |
| 432 Pythia | 1897 DO | ThePythia, Greek prophetess | DMP · 432 |
| 433 Eros | 1898 DQ | Eros, Greek god | DMP · 433 |
| 434 Hungaria | 1898 DR | Latin forHungary, a country in Central Europe | DMP · 434 |
| 435 Ella | 1898 DS | unknown origin of name | DMP · 435 |
| 436 Patricia | 1898 DT | unknown origin of name | DMP · 436 |
| 437 Rhodia | 1898 DP | Rhodia, anOceanid (sea nymph) from Greek mythology | DMP · 437 |
| 438 Zeuxo | 1898 DU | Zeuxo, an Oceanid in Greek mythology | DMP · 438 |
| 439 Ohio | 1898 EB | Ohio, U.S. state and river | DMP · 439 |
| 440 Theodora | 1898 EC | Theodora, daughter of Julius F. Stone, benefactor and time trustee of theOhio State University | DMP · 440 |
| 441 Bathilde | 1898 ED | unknown origin of name | DMP · 441 |
| 442 Eichsfeldia | 1899 EE | The region ofEichsfeld, located in Lower Saxony, Germany | DMP · 442 |
| 443 Photographica | 1899 EF | Photography, the method first used byMax Wolf (1863–1932) to discover asteroids | DMP · 443 |
| 444 Gyptis | 1899 EL | Gyptis, wife of Protis, founder ofMarseille, France | DMP · 444 |
| 445 Edna | 1899 EX | Edna, wife of Julius F. Stone, benefactor and time trustee of theOhio State University | DMP · 445 |
| 446 Aeternitas | 1899 ER | Aeternitas, Roman god | DMP · 446 |
| 447 Valentine | 1899 ES | Valentine, daughter of BaronAlbert von Rothschild (1844–1911), benefactor | DMP · 447 |
| 448 Natalie | 1899 ET | unknown origin of name | DMP · 448 |
| 449 Hamburga | 1899 EU | The city ofHamburg, Germany | DMP · 449 |
| 450 Brigitta | 1899 EV | unknown origin of name | DMP · 450 |
| 451 Patientia | 1899 EY | Patientia, Latin forpatience | DMP · 451 |
| 452 Hamiltonia | 1899 FD | Mount Hamilton, California | DMP · 452 |
| 453 Tea | 1900 FA | unknown origin of name | DMP · 453 |
| 454 Mathesis | 1900 FC | Greek for (the act of)learning, chosen to mark the 300th anniversary of theMathematische Gesellschaft in Hamburg founded in 1690 | DMP · 454 |
| 455 Bruchsalia | 1900 FG | Bruchsal, Germany | DMP · 455 |
| 456 Abnoba | 1900 FH | Abnoba, Celtic goddess | DMP · 456 |
| 457 Alleghenia | 1900 FJ | Allegheny Observatory, Pennsylvania, United States | DMP · 457 |
| 458 Hercynia | 1900 FK | Latin name for a forested region of Germany | DMP · 458 |
| 459 Signe | 1900 FM | Signy, sister ofSigmund in Norse mythology | DMP · 459 |
| 460 Scania | 1900 FN | Skåne (Scania), region of Sweden | DMP · 460 |
| 461 Saskia | 1900 FP | Saskia van Uylenburgh (1612–1642), wife ofRembrandt | DMP · 461 |
| 462 Eriphyla | 1900 FQ | Eriphyle, mythological Greek woman | DMP · 462 |
| 463 Lola | 1900 FS | Lola, character inCavalleria Rusticana, opera by Italian composerPietro Mascagni (1863–1945) | DMP · 463 |
| 464 Megaira | 1901 FV | Megaira, one of the GreekErinyes (Furies) | DMP · 464 |
| 465 Alekto | 1901 FW | Alecto, one of the GreekErinyes (Furies) | DMP · 465 |
| 466 Tisiphone | 1901 FX | Tisiphone, one of the GreekErinyes (Furies) | DMP · 466 |
| 467 Laura | 1901 FY | Laura, character inLa Gioconda, opera by Italian composerAmilcare Ponchielli (1834–1886). Alternatively, it may have been named after the character inSonnets to Laura byPetrarch (1304–1374) | DMP · 467 |
| 468 Lina | 1901 FZ | Lina, a maidservant of the discovererMax Wolf (1863–1932) | DMP · 468 |
| 469 Argentina | 1901 GE | Argentina, country in South America | DMP · 469 |
| 470 Kilia | 1901 GJ | Latin forKiel, Germany | DMP · 470 |
| 471 Papagena | 1901 GN | Papagena, a character inMozart's operaThe Magic Flute | DMP · 471 |
| 472 Roma | 1901 GP | The city ofRome, Italy | DMP · 472 |
| 473 Nolli | 1901 GC | Nolli is a nickname for a small child used inMax Wolf's family (discoverer) | DMP · 473 |
| 474 Prudentia | 1901 GD | Prudentia, Roman allegorical figure | DMP · 474 |
| 475 Ocllo | 1901 HN | Ocllo, Inca queen, named after the wife of one of the four sons of Pirua Wiracocha, creator god of civilization in Inca mythology | DMP · 475 |
| 476 Hedwig | 1901 GQ | Hedwig, wife of Swedish–Danish astronomerElis Strömgren (1870–1947) | DMP · 476 |
| 477 Italia | 1901 GR | Italy, country | DMP · 477 |
| 478 Tergeste | 1901 GU | Latin name forTrieste, Italy | DMP · 478 |
| 479 Caprera | 1901 HJ | Caprera, island inSardinia, Italy | DMP · 479 |
| 480 Hansa | 1901 GL | TheHanseatic League, a medieval confederation of merchant guilds and market towns in Northwestern and Central Europe | DMP · 480 |
| 481 Emita | 1902 HP | unknown origin of name | DMP · 481 |
| 482 Petrina | 1902 HT | Feminine form of Petrus, Latin for Peter, one of the discoverer's dogs (Max Wolf) | DMP · 482 |
| 483 Seppina | 1902 HU | Sepp, name of one of the discoverer's dogs (Max Wolf) | DMP · 483 |
| 484 Pittsburghia | 1902 HX | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States | DMP · 484 |
| 485 Genua | 1902 HZ | Latin name for the city ofGenoa, in Liguria, Italy | DMP · 485 |
| 486 Cremona | 1902 JB | The city ofCremona in Lombardy, Italy | DMP · 486 |
| 487 Venetia | 1902 JL | The ItalianVeneto region with its capitalVenice | DMP · 487 |
| 488 Kreusa | 1902 JG | Creusa, various Greek figures | DMP · 488 |
| 489 Comacina | 1902 JM | Comacina, island inLake Como, Italy | DMP · 489 |
| 490 Veritas | 1902 JP | Veritas, Roman goddess | DMP · 490 |
| 491 Carina | 1902 JQ | unknown origin of name | DMP · 491 |
| 492 Gismonda | 1902 JR | Gismonda, a figure inThe Decameron, a collection of novellas by ItalianGiovanni Boccaccio (1313–1375). She is the daughter of Tancred, prince of Salerno. | DMP · 492 |
| 493 Griseldis | 1902 JS | Griselda, folk tale heroine | DMP · 493 |
| 494 Virtus | 1902 JV | Virtus, Roman deity | DMP · 494 |
| 495 Eulalia | 1902 KG | The grandmother of the discoverer's wife (Max Wolf) | DMP · 495 |
| 496 Gryphia | 1902 KH | Andreas Gryphius, German poet | DMP · 496 |
| 497 Iva | 1902 KJ | Iva Shores, daughter of the discoverer's landlord (Raymond Smith Dugan) | DMP · 497 |
| 498 Tokio | 1902 KU | The city ofTokyo, Japan | DMP · 498 |
| 499 Venusia | 1902 KX | Venusia, an alternative name for the Swedish island ofHven | DMP · 499 |
| 500 Selinur | 1903 LA | Selinur, a character in the novelAuch Einer by GermanFriedrich Theodor Vischer (1807–1887) | DMP · 500 |
| Named minor planet | Provisional | This minor planet was named for... | Ref · Catalog |
|---|---|---|---|
| 501 Urhixidur | 1903 LB | Urhixidur, character in the novelAuch Einer by GermanFriedrich Theodor Vischer (1807–1887) | DMP · 501 |
| 502 Sigune | 1903 LC | Sigune, character in the novelAuch Einer by GermanFriedrich Theodor Vischer (1807–1887). The name may originate from Arthurian legend, where Sigune is the cousin ofParzival. | DMP · 502 |
| 503 Evelyn | 1903 LF | Evelyn Smith Dugan, the discoverer's (Raymond Smith Dugan) mother | DMP · 503 |
| 504 Cora | 1902 LK | Cora, fromInca mythology. She is the wife of one of the four sons of Pirua Wiracocha, creator god of Inca civilization. Also see(5056). | DMP · 504 |
| 505 Cava | 1902 LL | Mama Cava, Inca queen | DMP · 505 |
| 506 Marion | 1903 LN | Marion Orcutt, cousin of American discovererRaymond Smith Dugan (1878–1940) | DMP · 506 |
| 507 Laodica | 1903 LO | Laodice from Greek mythology. She is the daughter ofHecuba and Trojan kingPriam. | DMP · 507 |
| 508 Princetonia | 1903 LQ | Princeton University, New Jersey, United States | DMP · 508 |
| 509 Iolanda | 1903 LR | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 509 |
| 510 Mabella | 1903 LT | Mabel Loomis Todd (1856–1932), American editor and writer. She is the daughter of the mathematicianElias Loomis, and the wife of astronomer David Peck Todd(see next entry). | DMP · 510 |
| 511 Davida | 1903 LU | David Peck Todd (1855–1939), American astronomer and husband toMabel Loomis Todd(see previous entry). | DMP · 511 |
| 512 Taurinensis | 1903 LV | The city ofTurin in northern Italy. Its Latin name isTaurinum. | DMP · 512 |
| 513 Centesima | 1903 LY | Centesima, for the 100th discovery of an asteroid made byMax Wolf (1863–1932) | DMP · 513 |
| 514 Armida | 1903 MB | Armida, fictional character in the epic poemJerusalem Delivered by Italian baroque poetTorquato Tasso (1544–1595). The story of Armida and Rinaldo has also been the basis of several the operas includingArmide by German bohemianChristoph Willibald Gluck (1714–1787),also see(579). | DMP · 514 |
| 515 Athalia | 1903 ME | Athalia, Biblical queen of Judah (2 Kings ix) | DMP · 515 |
| 516 Amherstia | 1903 MG | Amherst College in Massachusetts, United States, thealma mater of the discovererRaymond Smith Dugan (1878–1940) | DMP · 516 |
| 517 Edith | 1903 MH | Edith Dugan Eveleth, sister of American discovererRaymond Smith Dugan | DMP · 517 |
| 518 Halawe | 1903 MO | Halva (Halawe), a type of Arabic sweetmeat, a favourite of the discovererRaymond Smith Dugan | DMP · 518 |
| 519 Sylvania | 1903 MP | From "sylvan" (forest, wood), for the discoverer's (Raymond Smith Dugan) passion of tramping through theforests since he was a small boy | DMP · 519 |
| 520 Franziska | 1903 MV | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 520 |
| 521 Brixia | 1904 NB | The Italian city ofBrescia (Brixia in Latin), birthplace of astronomer Emilio Bianchi, who computed the asteroid's orbit. | DMP · 521 |
| 522 Helga | 1904 NC | ([H] only says "Named by Lt. Th. Lassen, orbit computer"; seeAN 169, 363. Note thatcomputer does not refer to apersonal computer, i.e. a machine, but rather to a person actually doing the necessary calculations) | DMP · 522 |
| 523 Ada | 1904 ND | Ada Helme, school friend and neighbour of the discoverer | DMP · 523 |
| 524 Fidelio | 1904 NN | Leonora's pseudonym inBeethoven's only operaFidelio | DMP · 524 |
| 525 Adelaide | 1908 EKa | QueenAdelaide, consort to KingWilliam IV ([H] says nothing) This name was first borne by aMax Wolf discovery until it was identified as1171 Rusthawelia; the name was then reassigned to thisJ. H. Metcalf discovery | DMP · 525 |
| 526 Jena | 1904 NQ | Jena,Germany, on the occasion of a meeting of theAstronomische Gesellschaft there in 1905 (seeAN 172, 287) | DMP · 526 |
| 527 Euryanthe | 1904 NR | The main character in the operaEuryanthe by German composerCarl Maria von Weber (1786–1826) | DMP · 527 |
| 528 Rezia | 1904 NS | Rezia, a character in the operaOberon byCarl Maria von Weber (1786–1826) | DMP · 528 |
| 529 Preziosa | 1904 NT | Character in the short storyLa Gitanilla byMiguel de Cervantes (1547–1616) | DMP · 529 |
| 530 Turandot | 1904 NV | Turandot, character in the operaTurandot byGiacomo Puccini (1858–1924) | DMP · 530 |
| 531 Zerlina | 1904 NW | Zerlina, character in the operaDon Giovanni byMozart (1756–1791) | DMP · 531 |
| 532 Herculina | 1904 NY | Feminine form ofHercules, Roman demigod ([H] simply says "named by Prof.Elia Millosevich, Observatory of the Collegio Romano"AN 167, 45) | DMP · 532 |
| 533 Sara | 1904 NZ | Sara, a friend of the discovererRaymond Smith Dugan (1878–1940) | DMP · 533 |
| 534 Nassovia | 1904 OA | TheNassau Hall is the oldest building atPrinceton University in New Jersey, United States. | DMP · 534 |
| 535 Montague | 1904 OC | The town ofMontague, Massachusetts, the birthplace of the American discovererRaymond Smith Dugan (1878–1940) | DMP · 535 |
| 536 Merapi | 1904 OF | Mount Merapi on the island of Sumatra, Indonesia, site of several expeditions to observe the solar eclipse of 17 May 1901 | DMP · 536 |
| 537 Pauly | 1904 OG | Max Pauly, German businessman (manager of a sugar factory) and amateur optician whomErnst Abbe appointed as head of the newly established Astronomy Division ofZeiss to design and produce telescope lenses; he ground the 10-inch lens of theBruce double-astrograph, the "jewel" of the Heidelberg Observatory | DMP · 537 |
| 538 Friederike | 1904 OK | Friederike, a friend of the discovererPaul Götz (1883–1962) from Heidelberg, Germany | DMP · 538 |
| 539 Pamina | 1904 OL | Pamina, a character in the operaThe Magic Flute byMozart (1756–1791) | DMP · 539 |
| 540 Rosamunde | 1904 ON | The main character in the playRosamunde byHelmina von Chézy, best remembered for itsincidental music composed bySchubert (1797–1828) | DMP · 540 |
| 541 Deborah | 1904 OO | Deborah, Biblical prophetess who helped to free theIsraelites. She is mentioned in theBook of Judges. | DMP · 541 |
| 542 Susanna | 1904 OQ | Susanna, a friend of the co-discovererPaul Götz (1883–1962) from Heidelberg, Germany | DMP · 542 |
| 543 Charlotte | 1904 OT | Charlotte, a friend of the discovererPaul Götz (1883–1962) from Heidelberg, Germany | DMP · 543 |
| 544 Jetta | 1904 OU | Jetta, a legendary German soothsayer. "Jettenbühl" is the site where Jetta was said to have lived and on which the medievalHeidelberg Castle was later built. | DMP · 544 |
| 545 Messalina | 1904 OY | Messalina (c. 17/20–48), the third wife of Roman EmperorClaudius | DMP · 545 |
| 546 Herodias | 1904 PA | Herodias (c. 15 BC – 39 AD), princess of the Herodian dynasty of Judaea during the time of the Roman Empire. She was a consort ofHerod Antipas, the 1st-century ruler of Galilee and Perea. In the Gospels, Herodias plays a major role in the execution ofJohn the Baptist. | DMP · 546 |
| 547 Praxedis | 1904 PB | Praxedis, a character in the novelEkkehard by GermanJoseph Victor von Scheffel (1826–1886) | DMP · 547 |
| 548 Kressida | 1904 PC | Cressida, Trojan princess, character ofShakespeare's playTroilus and Cressida (based on the medieval legend of Troy, as opposed to the classical) | DMP · 548 |
| 549 Jessonda | 1904 PK | Jessonda, a character in the operaJessonda by German composerLouis Spohr (1784–1859) | DMP · 549 |
| 550 Senta | 1904 PL | Senta, a character in the operaThe Flying Dutchman by German composerRichard Wagner (1813–1883) | DMP · 550 |
| 551 Ortrud | 1904 PM | Ortrud, a character in the operaLohengrin byRichard Wagner, where she is the wife of Ferederick of Telramund. | DMP · 551 |
| 552 Sigelinde | 1904 PO | Sigelinde, a character in the operaDie Walküre byRichard Wagner (1813–1883) | DMP · 552 |
| 553 Kundry | 1904 PP | Kundry, a character in the operaParsifal byRichard Wagner, who is both sorceress and mortal woman. The opera is based on the epic by Wolfram von Eschenbach. | DMP · 553 |
| 554 Peraga | 1905 PS | The village ofVigonza (Peraga) in northern Italy, where the family of astronomer G. Abetti, who computed the asteroid's orbit, owned country villa. | DMP · 554 |
| 555 Norma | 1905 PT | The main character in the operaNorma by Italian composerVincenzo Bellini (1801–1835) | DMP · 555 |
| 556 Phyllis | 1905 PW | Phyllis, from Greek mythology. The Thracian princess commits suicide when she realizes that her husband, kingDemophon of Athens, will not return to her. | DMP · 556 |
| 557 Violetta | 1905 PY | Violetta, the frivolous woman and leading character in the operaLa traviata byGiuseppe Verdi. The opera is based on the novelLa Dame aux Camélias byAlexandre Dumasfils (1824–1895) | DMP · 557 |
| 558 Carmen | 1905 QB | The main character in the operaCarmen by French composerGeorges Bizet (1838–1875). The opera is based on the novellaCarmen byProsper Mérimée (1803–1870). | DMP · 558 |
| 559 Nanon | 1905 QD | The operettaNanon, die Wirtin vom Goldenen Lamm by German-Austrian composerRichard Genée (1823–1895) | DMP · 559 |
| 560 Delila | 1905 QF | Delilah, Biblical character, set to music bySaint-Saëns in hisSamson et Dalila | DMP · 560 |
| 561 Ingwelde | 1905 QG | Ingwelde, opera byMax von Schillings (?) ([H] simply says « German feminine first name ») | DMP · 561 |
| 562 Salome | 1905 QH | Salomé, Biblical daughter ofHerod the Great, character ofRichard Strauss' operaSalome, in turn based onOscar Wilde'sSalomé play | DMP · 562 |
| 563 Suleika | 1905 QK | Suleika, character in the philosophical novelThus Spoke Zarathustra byFriedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900). Suleika and Dudu(see entry below) are mentioned in chapter "Among the Daughters of the Wilderness" (German:Unter Töchtern der Wüste,link) and are the novel's only feminine names. | DMP · 563 |
| 564 Dudu | 1905 QM | Dudu, character in the philosophical novelThus Spoke Zarathustra byFriedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900). Dudu and Suleika(see entry above) are mentioned in chapter "Among the Daughters of the Wilderness" (German:Unter Töchtern der Wüste,link) and are the novel's only feminine names. | DMP · 564 |
| 565 Marbachia | 1905 QN | The town ofMarbach in Hesse, Germany | DMP · 565 |
| 566 Stereoskopia | 1905 QO | TheBlink comparator, formerly known as "stereo-comparator", is an apparatus used to find differences between two photographs of the night sky by rapidly "blinking" back and forth between the two. In 1902, this asteroid was the first to be discovered by this method using photographic plates taken in 1899. The asteroid was named by the inventor of the Blink comparator,Carl Pulfrich (1858–1927). | DMP · 566 |
| 567 Eleutheria | 1905 QP | Eleutheria, the goddess of liberty in Greek mythology. The counterpart of Eleutheria among the Roman gods isLibertas. | DMP · 567 |
| 568 Cheruskia | 1905 QS | Cheruskia, student fraternity atHeidelberg University, named in turn after theCherusci, an early German tribe | DMP · 568 |
| 569 Misa | 1905 QT | Misa, from Greek mythology. She is the mother ofDionysus (Bacchus) and a divinity inOrphism, a mystic religion from the ancient Greek and Hellenistic world. | DMP · 569 |
| 570 Kythera | 1905 QX | Kythira, Greek island (First name in along list published in 1914) | DMP · 570 |
| 571 Dulcinea | 1905 QZ | Dulcinea, a character in the novelDon Quixote byMiguel de Cervantes (1547–1616) | DMP · 571 |
| 572 Rebekka | 1905 RB | Rebekka, a "bourgeois daughter" from Heidelberg, Germany. The name was given by the discovererPaul Götz and may be inspired by the asteroid's provisional designation which contains the letters "RB". | DMP · 572 |
| 573 Recha | 1905 RC | Recha, a character in the playNathan der Weise byGotthold Ephraim Lessing (1729–1781). The name may be inspired by the asteroid's provisional designation which contains the letters "RC". | DMP · 573 |
| 574 Reginhild | 1905 RD | Unknown origin of name. The choice for the German feminine first name may have been inspired by the asteroid's provisional designation, containing the letters "RD". | DMP · 574 |
| 575 Renate | 1905 RE | Unknown origin of name; the name may be inspired by the asteroid's provisional designation, containing the letters "RE". | DMP · 575 |
| 576 Emanuela | 1905 RF | Emanuela, a friend of the discovererPaul Götz (1883–1962) | DMP · 576 |
| 577 Rhea | 1905 RH | Rhea, from Greek mythology. She is aTitan of the first generation and known as "the mother of gods". The name may be inspired by the asteroid's provisional designation, containing the letters "RH". | DMP · 577 |
| 578 Happelia | 1905 RZ | Carl Happel (1820–1914), a German painter and benefactor of theHeidelberg Observatory, where the Happel Laboratory is named after him. | DMP · 578 |
| 579 Sidonia | 1905 SD | Sidonia, character in the epic poemJerusalem Delivered by Italian baroque poetTorquato Tasso (1544–1595). The character has also been adopted in the operaArmide by German bohemianChristoph Willibald Gluck (1714–1787), which is based on the poem.Also see(514). The nameSidonia may be inspired by the asteroid's provisional designation, containing the letters "SD". | DMP · 579 |
| 580 Selene | 1905 SE | Selene, lunar goddess from Greek mythology | DMP · 580 |
| 581 Tauntonia | 1905 SH | The city ofTaunton, Massachusetts, in the United States, where this asteroid was discovered byJoel Hastings Metcalf | DMP · 581 |
| 582 Olympia | 1906 SO | Olympia, Greece | DMP · 582 |
| 583 Klotilde | 1905 SP | Klotilde, daughter of Austrian astronomerEdmund Weiss (1837–1917), director of theVienna Observatory where this asteroid was discovered byJohann Palisa. It was named by Klotilde's mother, Adelinde Weiss (née Fenzel);also see(229). | DMP · 583 |
| 584 Semiramis | 1906 SY | Semiramis, Assyrian queen | DMP · 584 |
| 585 Bilkis | 1906 TA | The BiblicalQueen of Sheba who visited KingSolomon. In theQuran, she is known as "Bilqis", "Balqis" or "Balkis". | DMP · 585 |
| 586 Thekla | 1906 TC | Thecla (born 30 AD), a saint of the early Christian Church | DMP · 586 |
| 587 Hypsipyle | 1906 TF | Hypsipyle, mythological Greek queen of Lemnos, mother of twins byJason | DMP · 587 |
| 588 Achilles | 1906 TG | Achilles, the greatest warrior in Greek mythology | DMP · 588 |
| 589 Croatia | 1906 TM | The country ofCroatia in southeastern Europe | DMP · 589 |
| 590 Tomyris | 1906 TO | Tomyris, Scythian Queen of theMassagetae | DMP · 590 |
| 591 Irmgard | 1906 TP | Unknown origin of name. Irmgard is a common feminine first name in German. | DMP · 591 |
| 592 Bathseba | 1906 TS | Bathsheba, wife ofUrias, mother ofSolomon | DMP · 592 |
| 593 Titania | 1906 TT | Titania, folkloric queen of the fairies (name inspired by the provisional designation letters TT) | DMP · 593 |
| 594 Mireille | 1906 TW | Mirèio, a narrative poem by French poetFrédéric Mistral (1830–1914), the source of inspiration for the operaMireille by the French composerCharles Gounod | DMP · 594 |
| 595 Polyxena | 1906 TZ | Polyxena, from Greek mythology. The Trojan princess is the daughter ofPriam andHecuba. | DMP · 595 |
| 596 Scheila | 1906 UA | An English student at theUniversity of Heidelberg, a friend of the discoverer | DMP · 596 |
| 597 Bandusia | 1906 UB | Spring of Bandusia, a fountain near Polezzo in Italy | DMP · 597 |
| 598 Octavia | 1906 UC | Octavia the Younger (c. 66 BC–11 BC), sister ofAugustus | DMP · 598 |
| 599 Luisa | 1906 UJ | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 599 |
| 600 Musa | 1906 UM | TheMuses, the nine inspirational goddesses of poetry, science, and the arts in Greek mythology | DMP · 600 |
| Named minor planet | Provisional | This minor planet was named for... | Ref · Catalog |
|---|---|---|---|
| 601 Nerthus | 1906 UN | Nerthus, Germanic/Scandinavian Earth Mother goddess | DMP · 601 |
| 602 Marianna | 1906 TE | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 602 |
| 603 Timandra | 1906 TJ | Timandra, mythological Greek woman, sister ofHelen of Troy, mother ofEvander | DMP · 603 |
| 604 Tekmessa | 1906 TK | Tecmessa of Phrygia, mythological Greek woman, daughter of the Phrygian prince Teubrantes, captive ofAjax, by whom she had a son,Eurysaces | DMP · 604 |
| 605 Juvisia | 1906 UU | The city ofJuvisy-sur-Orge, France, location of theCamille Flammarion Observatory | DMP · 605 |
| 606 Brangäne | 1906 VB | Brangäne, character in the operaTristan und Isolde byRichard Wagner. She is a maid servant of Isolda. | DMP · 606 |
| 607 Jenny | 1906 VC | Jenny Adolfine Kessler, friend of the discovererAugust Kopff, on the occasion of her engagement | DMP · 607 |
| 608 Adolfine | 1906 VD | DMP · 608 | |
| 609 Fulvia | 1906 VF | Fulvia (c. 83 BC – 40 BC), aristocratic Roman woman and wife ofMark Antony | DMP · 609 |
| 610 Valeska | 1906 VK | Unknown origin of name. The choice for this name may have been inspired by the asteroid's provisional designation, containing the letters "VK". | DMP · 610 |
| 611 Valeria | 1906 VL | Unknown origin of name. The choice for this name may have been inspired by the asteroid's provisional designation, containing the letters "VL" | DMP · 611 |
| 612 Veronika | 1906 VN | Unknown origin of name. The choice for this name may have been inspired by the asteroid's provisional designation, containing the letters "VN" | DMP · 612 |
| 613 Ginevra | 1906 VP | Guinevere, wife ofKing Arthur from Arthurian legend (possibly) | DMP · 613 |
| 614 Pia | 1906 VQ | Pia Observatory (German:Pia-Sternwarte), inTrieste, Italy, the private observatory ofJohann Nepomuk Krieger (1865–1902), German amateur astronomer andselenographer | DMP · 614 |
| 615 Roswitha | 1906 VR | Hrotsvitha of Gandersheim (c. 935–973), German poet | DMP · 615 |
| 616 Elly | 1906 VT | Elly Böhm, wife of German mathematicianKarl Böhm (1873–1958;bio-de) | DMP · 616 |
| 617 Patroclus | 1906 VY | Patroclus, warrior from Greek mythology, close friend of Achilles and killed by Hector. The satellite of this Jupiter trojan,(617) Patroclus I Menoetius, was named afterMenoetius, father of Patroclus. | DMP · 617 |
| 618 Elfriede | 1906 VZ | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 618 |
| 619 Triberga | 1906 WC | The town ofTriberg im Schwarzwald, southern Germany | DMP · 619 |
| 620 Drakonia | 1906 WE | Drake University, Iowa, US, where the orbit computers worked | DMP · 620 |
| 621 Werdandi | 1906 WJ | Verdandi, one of theNorns in Norse mythology | DMP · 621 |
| 622 Esther | 1906 WP | Esther, Biblical heroine described in the Book of Esther as a Jewish queen of the Persian king Ahasuerus | DMP · 622 |
| 623 Chimaera | 1907 XJ | Mount Chimaera of Lycia, inspiration for theChimera, mythological Greek monster | DMP · 623 |
| 624 Hektor | 1907 XM | Hector, Trojan hero from Greek mythology | DMP · 624 |
| 625 Xenia | 1907 XN | Unknown origin of name. The choice for this name may have been inspired by the asteroid's provisional designation, containing the letters "XN" | DMP · 625 |
| 626 Notburga | 1907 XO | Saint Notburga (c. 1265–1313), holy character of theNeckar valley, the discovery site | DMP · 626 |
| 627 Charis | 1907 XS | Charis, one of theCharites (Graces), the goddesses of charm, beauty, creativity, and fertility in Greek mythology. They are the daughters of Zeus andEurynome and includeEuphrosyne,Thalia andAglaea (Aglaja). | DMP · 627 |
| 628 Christine | 1907 XT | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 628 |
| 629 Bernardina | 1907 XU | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 629 |
| 630 Euphemia | 1907 XW | SaintEuphemia (died 303 AD), whose feast day is September 16. The name also means a good omen. | DMP · 630 |
| 631 Philippina | 1907 YJ | Philipp Kessler, friend of the discoverer, on the occasion of his engagement. He is a friend of the astronomerAugust Kopff who discovered this asteroid(see also634). | DMP · 631 |
| 632 Pyrrha | 1907 YX | Pyrrha, wife of Deukalion, Greek mythological woman | DMP · 632 |
| 633 Zelima | 1907 ZM | Unknown origin of name. The choice for this name may have been inspired by the asteroid's provisional designation, containing the letters "ZM" | DMP · 633 |
| 634 Ute | 1907 ZN | Ute Kessler, on the occasion of her engagement. She is a friend of the astronomerAugust Kopff who discovered this asteroid(see also631). | DMP · 634 |
| 635 Vundtia | 1907 ZS | Wilhelm Wundt (1832–1920), German psychologist | DMP · 635 |
| 636 Erika | 1907 XP | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 636 |
| 637 Chrysothemis | 1907 YE | Chrysothemis, mythological daughter ofAgamemnon, character inSophocles'Electra | DMP · 637 |
| 638 Moira | 1907 ZQ | Moirai (Moira), Greek goddess of fate | DMP · 638 |
| 639 Latona | 1907 ZT | Roman goddessLatona, daughter of Ceo Titan, loved by Jupiter, and mother of Apollo and Diana | DMP · 639 |
| 640 Brambilla | 1907 ZW | Prinzessin Brambilla, novel written byE. T. A. Hoffmann (1776–1822), and set to music byWalter Braunfels (1882–1954) | DMP · 640 |
| 641 Agnes | 1907 ZX | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 641 |
| 642 Clara | 1907 ZY | Clara, one of the discoverer's housekeepers (Max Wolf) | DMP · 642 |
| 643 Scheherezade | 1907 ZZ | Scheherazade, legendary Arabic storyteller in1001 Nights | DMP · 643 |
| 644 Cosima | 1907 AA | Cosima Wagner (1837–1930), daughter of Hungarian pianist and composerFranz Liszt, and second wife of German composerRichard Wagner | DMP · 644 |
| 645 Agrippina | 1907 AG | Agrippina the Elder (14 BC–33) and her daughterAgrippina the Younger (15–59), two Roman noblewomen. Former was the wife of generalGermanicus and mother of EmperorCaligula, while the latter was the mother of EmperorNero. | DMP · 645 |
| 646 Kastalia | 1907 AC | Castalia, Greek nymph whomApollo transformed into a fountain atDelphi, at the base of MountParnassos | DMP · 646 |
| 647 Adelgunde | 1907 AD | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 647 |
| 648 Pippa | 1907 AE | Pippa, main character in the novelAnd Pippa Dances (German:Und Pippa Tanzt!) by German writerGerhardt Hauptmann (1862–1946) | DMP · 648 |
| 649 Josefa | 1907 AF | Unknown origin of name. A feminine first name in German. | DMP · 649 |
| 650 Amalasuntha | 1907 AM | Amalasuntha,Ostrogoth queen, daughter ofTheoderich | DMP · 650 |
| 651 Antikleia | 1907 AN | Anticlea, from Greek mythology. She is the wife ofLaertes and mother ofOdysseus. | DMP · 651 |
| 652 Jubilatrix | 1907 AU | The 60-yearjubilee of EmperorFranz Joseph of Austria, during which this minor planet was discovered | DMP · 652 |
| 653 Berenike | 1907 BK | Berenice II of Egypt (c. 267–221 BC), queen ofCyrene and Egypt | DMP · 653 |
| 654 Zelinda | 1908 BM | Zelinda Dini, sister of Italian mathematicianUlisse Dini (1845–1918). The name was proposed by astronomerElia Millosevich, a good friend of Dini. | DMP · 654 |
| 655 Briseïs | 1907 BF | Briseis, mythological Trojan slave | DMP · 655 |
| 656 Beagle | 1908 BU | HMSBeagle,Darwin's ship | DMP · 656 |
| 657 Gunlöd | 1908 BV | Gunnlod, mythological Norse giantess | DMP · 657 |
| 658 Asteria | 1908 BW | Asteria, various Greek figures | DMP · 658 |
| 659 Nestor | 1908 CS | Nestor, mythological Greek king | DMP · 659 |
| 660 Crescentia | 1908 CC | Heroine of a German legend, a variant of theGenevieve of Brabant medieval story, found in theHistorie von der geduldigen Konigin Crescentia, itself based on a 12th-century poem in theKaiserchronik | DMP · 660 |
| 661 Cloelia | 1908 CL | Cloelia, legendary Roman woman | DMP · 661 |
| 662 Newtonia | 1908 CW | previously believed to refer toIsaac Newton, British physicist; but later correctly identified as being named afterNewton, Massachusetts(Isaac Newton is now honored by asteroid8000 Isaac Newton) | DMP · 662 |
| 663 Gerlinde | 1908 DG | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 663 |
| 664 Judith | 1908 DH | Biblical heroine dramatised inFriedrich Hebbel's playJudith | DMP · 664 |
| 665 Sabine | 1908 DK | Unknown origin of name. | DMP · 665 |
| 666 Desdemona | 1908 DM | Desdemona, character in Shakespeare'sOthello. The name may have been inspired by the asteroid's provisional designation, containing the letters "DM". | DMP · 666 |
| 667 Denise | 1908 DN | Unknown origin of name. The choice for this name may have been inspired by the asteroid's provisional designation, containing the letters "DN". | DMP · 667 |
| 668 Dora | 1908 DO | Dora, a friend of the wife of astronomerAugust Kopff, who discovered this asteroid. The name may have been inspired by the asteroid's provisional designation, containing the letters "DO". | DMP · 668 |
| 669 Kypria | 1908 DQ | Kypria, poem sometimes attributed toHomer, which serves as an introduction to theIliad | DMP · 669 |
| 670 Ottegebe | 1908 DR | Character inGerhardt Hauptmann's playDer arme Heinrich | DMP · 670 |
| 671 Carnegia | 1908 DV | TheCarnegie Institution of Washington, DC, founded byAndrew Carnegie, Scottish-born American businessman and philanthropist | DMP · 671 |
| 672 Astarte | 1908 DY | 'Ashtart, Phoenician goddess of love and fertility | DMP · 672 |
| 673 Edda | 1908 EA | The NorseEdda, a collection of myths | DMP · 673 |
| 674 Rachele | 1908 EP | Wife of Italian astronomerEmilio Bianchi, the orbit computer | DMP · 674 |
| 675 Ludmilla | 1908 DU | Character in the operaRuslan and Lyudmila by Russian composerMikhail Glinka (1804–1857) | DMP · 675 |
| 676 Melitta | 1909 FN | Attic form of the Greek nameMelissa, nymph changed into a bee (and also an allusion to the discoverer's name,Melotte) | DMP · 676 |
| 677 Aaltje | 1909 FR | Aaltje Noordewier–Reddingius (1868–1949), a Dutch classicalsoprano | DMP · 677 |
| 678 Fredegundis | 1909 FS | Fredegundis, an opera based on the life of Fredegund (a.k.a. Fredegunda, Fredegundis, Fredigundis, Frédégonde, Queen consort ofChilperic I, the Merovingian Frankish king of Soissons), begun by the French composer Ernest Guirand and completed bySaint-Saëns | DMP · 678 |
| 679 Pax | 1909 FY | Pax, Roman goddess of peace. Her Greek equivalent isEirene. | DMP · 679 |
| 680 Genoveva | 1909 GW | Main character inFriedrich Hebbel's playGenoveva | DMP · 680 |
| 681 Gorgo | 1909 GZ | Gorgon (German:Gorgo) one of the three sisters –Euryale,Stheno, andMedusa – who had hair made of living, venomous snakes and a gaze that could turn one to stone.Paul Herget reports thatIngrid van Houten-Groeneveld andAntonio Paluzie-Borrell [ca] thought the name refers to Gorgo (a.k.a. Gorgos, Gorgus), King of Salamine (Salamis, Cyprus) in the 5th century B.C., who accompanied Xerxes in Greece.[6] | DMP · 681 |
| 682 Hagar | 1909 HA | Hagar, Biblical woman in the Book of Genesis | DMP · 682 |
| 683 Lanzia | 1909 HC | Karl Lanz (1873–1921;bio-de), a German mechanical engineer and industrialist who provided the funds for the re-establishment of theHeidelberg Academy of Sciences and Humanities | DMP · 683 |
| 684 Hildburg | 1909 HD | Unknown origin of name. The choice for this German feminine first name may have been inspired by the asteroid's provisional designation, containing the letters "HD". | DMP · 684 |
| 685 Hermia | 1909 HE | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 685 |
| 686 Gersuind | 1909 HF | Main character in the playGersuind byGerhart Hauptmann | DMP · 686 |
| 687 Tinette | 1909 HG | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 687 |
| 688 Melanie | 1909 HH | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 688 |
| 689 Zita | 1909 HJ | PrincessZita of Bourbon-Parma, wife of EmperorCharles I of Austria | DMP · 689 |
| 690 Wratislavia | 1909 HZ | Latin for Breslau (Wrocław), now inPoland | DMP · 690 |
| 691 Lehigh | 1909 JG | Lehigh University, US, where the computer (J. B. Reynolds) was | DMP · 691 |
| 692 Hippodamia | 1901 HD | Hippodamia, queen ofPisa from Greek mythology. She is the wife ofPelops and ancestor to kingAgamemnon. The choice for this name may have been inspired by the asteroid's provisional designation, containing the letters "HD". | DMP · 692 |
| 693 Zerbinetta | 1909 HN | Character inRichard Strauss' operaAriadne auf Naxos | DMP · 693 |
| 694 Ekard | 1909 JA | Drake University, US ('Drake' backwards), where the orbit computers (S. B. Nicholson and his wife) were | DMP · 694 |
| 695 Bella | 1909 JB | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 695 |
| 696 Leonora | 1910 JJ | Mary Leonora Snow, wife of the orbit computer, Arthur Snow | DMP · 696 |
| 697 Galilea | 1910 JO | Galileo Galilei (1564–1642), on the occasion of the 300th anniversary of his discovery of theGalilean moons | DMP · 697 |
| 698 Ernestina | 1910 JX | Ernst Wolf, son of the discovererMax Wolf (1863–1932) | DMP · 698 |
| 699 Hela | 1910 KD | Hel, Norse goddess of the dead | DMP · 699 |
| 700 Auravictrix | 1910 KE | Latin for 'victory against the wind' (named for the firstSchütte-Lanz Zeppelin flights in 1911) | DMP · 700 |
| Named minor planet | Provisional | This minor planet was named for... | Ref · Catalog |
|---|---|---|---|
| 701 Oriola | 1910 KN | The Old Worldgolden oriole,Oriolus oriolus | DMP · 701 |
| 702 Alauda | 1910 KQ | Thebird genusAlauda (larks) | DMP · 702 |
| 703 Noëmi | 1910 KT | Valentine Noëmi von Rothschild, wife of Baron Sigismund von Springer (presumed). Alternatively,Noemi is a Biblical heroine from theBook of Ruth (unsourced) | DMP · 703 |
| 704 Interamnia | 1910 KU | Latin for city ofTerni (Teramo) in Italy, birthplace of the discovererVincenzo Cerulli. Several Roman towns were called Interamnia, meaning "in between two rivers". | DMP · 704 |
| 705 Erminia | 1910 KV | The comic operettaErminie, by Edward Jacobowsky | DMP · 705 |
| 706 Hirundo | 1910 KX | The bird genusHirundo (swallows) | DMP · 706 |
| 707 Steina | 1910 LD | Mr. Stein, a benefactor of the Breslau Observatory (547) in former German Empire, now Poland | DMP · 707 |
| 708 Raphaela | 1911 LJ | Raphaël Bischoffsheim (1823–1906), French banker and philanthropist, founder of theNice Observatory | DMP · 708 |
| 709 Fringilla | 1911 LK | The bird genusFringilla (finches) | DMP · 709 |
| 710 Gertrud | 1911 LM | Gertrud Rheden, daughter of Austrian astronomerJoseph Rheden and granddaughter of the discovererJohann Palisa | DMP · 710 |
| 711 Marmulla | 1911 LN | Marble, the small spherical toy. The name is possibly derived from the German medieval word "Marmul", according to astronomerPaul Wild. The asteroid's name was originally spelt "Marmula". | DMP · 711 |
| 712 Boliviana | 1911 LO | Simón Bolívar (1783–1830), South American revolutionary | DMP · 712 |
| 713 Luscinia | 1911 LS | The bird genusLuscinia (nightingales) | DMP · 713 |
| 714 Ulula | 1911 LW | The bird genusUlula (owls) | DMP · 714 |
| 715 Transvaalia | 1911 LX | The province ofTransvaal in South Africa. This is the first numbered minor planet discovered in Africa. | DMP · 715 |
| 716 Berkeley | 1911 MD | University of California in Berkeley | DMP · 716 |
| 717 Wisibada | 1911 MJ | The German city ofWiesbaden, birthplace of the discovererFranz Kaiser (1891–1962) | DMP · 717 |
| 718 Erida | 1911 MS | Erida, daughter of American astronomerArmin Otto Leuschner (1868–1953) | DMP · 718 |
| 719 Albert | 1911 MT | BaronAlbert Salomon von Rothschild (1844–1911), benefactor of theVienna Observatory | DMP · 719 |
| 720 Bohlinia | 1911 MW | Karl Petrus Theodor Bohlin (1860–1939), Swedish astronomer, who studied Jupiter's perturbations. The name was given on the occasion of his 65th birthday. | DMP · 720 |
| 721 Tabora | 1911 MZ | TheTabora, an ocean liner visited during an astronomical conference | DMP · 721 |
| 722 Frieda | 1911 NA | Frieda, the daughter of Austrian astronomer Karl Hillebrand (1861–1939;bio-de) | DMP · 722 |
| 723 Hammonia | 1911 NB | Hamburg, Germany | DMP · 723 |
| 724 Hapag | 1911 NC | TheHamburg America Line (HAPAG), after the shipping line | DMP · 724 |
| 725 Amanda | 1911 ND | Amanda Schorr, wife of German astronomerRichard Schorr,see(1235) | DMP · 725 |
| 726 Joëlla | 1911 NM | Feminine form of Joël, forJoel Hastings Metcalf, American Unitarian minister and astronomer | DMP · 726 |
| 727 Nipponia | 1912 NT | Japan, where the minor planet was accidentally discovered twice (1900 FE; 1908 CV) byShin Hirayama | DMP · 727 |
| 728 Leonisis | 1912 NU | Leo Gans (1843–1935;bio-de), German chemist and president of the Physical Society at Frankfurt (German:Physikalischer Verein), named on the occasion of his 70th birthday. The Society's emblem shows the goddessIsis, and contributed to the ending of the asteroid's name. | DMP · 728 |
| 729 Watsonia | 1912 OD | James Craig Watson (1838–1880), Canadian-American astronomer | DMP · 729 |
| 730 Athanasia | 1912 OK | Greek forimmortality | DMP · 730 |
| 731 Sorga | 1912 OQ | Surga,Indonesian for "heavens" | DMP · 731 |
| 732 Tjilaki | 1912 OR | Tjilaki (Cilaki) river and village nearMalabar, Indonesia | DMP · 732 |
| 733 Mocia | 1912 PF | Werner "Mok" Wolf, son of the German discovererMax Wolf | DMP · 733 |
| 734 Benda | 1912 PH | Anna Benda, wife of Austrian discovererJohann Palisa. (In some publications the name has been erroneously attributed to Czech composerKarel Bendl, 1838–1897) | DMP · 734 |
| 735 Marghanna | 1912 PY | Margarete Vogt, mother of German discovererHeinrich Vogt; and Hanna, a relative of his | DMP · 735 |
| 736 Harvard | 1912 PZ | Harvard University, US | DMP · 736 |
| 737 Arequipa | 1912 QB | Arequipa, Peru, where Harvard University had an observing station | DMP · 737 |
| 738 Alagasta | 1913 QO | Original name of the German cityGau-Algesheim (Gaualgesheim), native city of discoverer's family (Franz Kaiser) | DMP · 738 |
| 739 Mandeville | 1913 QR | Mandeville, Jamaica | DMP · 739 |
| 740 Cantabia | 1913 QS | Contraction ofCantabrigia, Latin for Cambridge, named in honour ofCambridge, Massachusetts and itsHarvard University | DMP · 740 |
| 741 Botolphia | 1913 QT | Saint Botolph, 7th-century founder of the monastery that would becomeBoston, Lincolnshire, England | DMP · 741 |
| 742 Edisona | 1913 QU | Thomas Edison, American inventor | DMP · 742 |
| 743 Eugenisis | 1913 QV | Eugenisis, for "good creation" (composed Greek word: "eu" forgood, well and "genesis" forcreation). It was named by the discovererFranz Kaiser for the birth of his daughter. | DMP · 743 |
| 744 Aguntina | 1913 QW | Aguntum, the ancient Roman settlement in the province ofNoricum, near the Austrian town ofLienz, Tyrol, the birthplace of the discovererAdam Massinger (1888–1914) | DMP · 744 |
| 745 Mauritia | 1913 QX | Saint Maurice (Saint Mauritius), patron saint of a church inWiesbaden, Germany | DMP · 745 |
| 746 Marlu | 1913 QY | Marie-Louise Kaiser, a German physician and daughter of the discovererFranz Kaiser | DMP · 746 |
| 747 Winchester | 1913 QZ | Winchester, Massachusetts, United States, location of the Taunton Observatory (803) where this asteroid was discovered byJoel Hastings Metcalf | DMP · 747 |
| 748 Simeïsa | 1913 RD | Simeïs Observatory,Crimea,Ukraine, the discovery site | DMP · 748 |
| 749 Malzovia | 1913 RF | Nikolai Sergeevich Maltsov (S. I. Maltsov), Russian amateur astronomer, founder ofSimeïs Observatory | DMP · 749 |
| 750 Oskar | 1913 RG | Oskar Ruben von Rothschild (1888–1909), the youngest son ofAlbert Salomon Anselm von Rothschild | DMP · 750 |
| 751 Faïna | 1913 RK | Faina Mikhajlovna Neujmina, colleague and first wife of the discovererGrigory Neujmin (1886–1946) | DMP · 751 |
| 752 Sulamitis | 1913 RL | Sulamith, Biblical woman identified with theQueen of Sheba | DMP · 752 |
| 753 Tiflis | 1913 RM | The city ofTbilisi in Georgia, birthplace of the discovererGrigory Neujmin (1886–1946) | DMP · 753 |
| 754 Malabar | 1906 UT | Malabar,Java, Indonesia, commemorating the Dutch-German solar eclipse expedition of 1922 toChristmas Island | DMP · 754 |
| 755 Quintilla | 1908 CZ | Quintilla, feminine Italian first name, chosen because no other planet had a name beginning with Q so far. | DMP · 755 |
| 756 Lilliana | 1908 DC | Lillian, sister of American astronomerHarlow Shapley (1885–1972) | DMP · 756 |
| 757 Portlandia | 1908 EJ | The city ofPortland in Maine, United States, where the discoverer,Joel Hastings Metcalf (1866–1925), was a church minister at the time of his death | DMP · 757 |
| 758 Mancunia | 1912 PE | The city ofManchester, United Kingdom (by its Latin name "Mancunia"), native city of the discoverer,Harry Edwin Wood (1881–1946) | DMP · 758 |
| 759 Vinifera | 1913 SJ | Vitis vinifera, the wine grape, former means of livelihood of the discoverer's ancestors | DMP · 759 |
| 760 Massinga | 1913 SL | Adam Massinger (1888–1914), a German astronomer anddiscoverer of minor planets at Heidelberg Observatory who was killed in World War I (Src) | DMP · 760 |
| 761 Brendelia | 1913 SO | Martin Brendel (1862–1939), German astronomer, director of the International Planet Institute, who chose this minor planet amongst Kaiser's unnamed discoveries for its small orbital inclination | DMP · 761 |
| 762 Pulcova | 1913 SQ | Pulkovo Heights, hills near St. Petersburg, site of the oldest Russian observatory,Pulkovo Observatory | DMP · 762 |
| 763 Cupido | 1913 ST | Cupid, Roman god, because of the minor planet's relative closeness to the Sun | DMP · 763 |
| 764 Gedania | 1913 SU | The city ofGdańsk, Poland (formerlyFree City of Danzig) where the discoverer,Franz Kaiser (1891–1962), was an assistant at the observatory during the early 1920s. | DMP · 764 |
| 765 Mattiaca | 1913 SV | The city ofWiesbaden in Germany (by its Latin name "Mattiacum"), home town of discovererFranz Kaiser (1891–1962) | DMP · 765 |
| 766 Moguntia | 1913 SW | The city ofMainz in Germany (by its Latin name "Moguntia"), where the discoverer,Franz Kaiser, taught at city's Johannes Gutenberg University | DMP · 766 |
| 767 Bondia | 1913 SX | William Cranch Bond (1789–1859) and his sonGeorge Phillips Bond (1825–1865), both American astronomers and directors of theHarvard College Observatory in Cambridge, Massachusetts. | DMP · 767 |
| 768 Struveana | 1913 SZ | Friedrich Georg Wilhelm Struve (1793–1864),Otto Wilhelm Struve (1819–1905) andHermann Struve (1854–1920), Russo-German astronomers, known for their double star studies and directors of thePulkovo andBerlin Observatory observatories, respectively. | DMP · 768 |
| 769 Tatjana | 1913 TA | Tatjana, a colleague of the discoverGrigory Neujmin atPulkovo Observatory in Saint Petersburg, Russia. Alternatively, "Tatjana" may refer to the heroine in the novelEugene Onegin byAleksandr Pushkin. | DMP · 769 |
| 770 Bali | 1913 TE | Mahabali (Bali), King of theDaityas in the HinduPuranas | DMP · 770 |
| 771 Libera | 1913 TO | A friend of the discoverer (the minor planet was named by his widow) | DMP · 771 |
| 772 Tanete | 1913 TR | The city of Tanete on the island ofSulawesi in Indonesia | DMP · 772 |
| 773 Irmintraud | 1913 TV | Feminine German first name, common in old myths and legends | DMP · 773 |
| 774 Armor | 1913 TW | Armorica, Celtic name for Northwest France (Brittany and Normandy) | DMP · 774 |
| 775 Lumière | 1914 TX | The brothersAuguste and Louis Lumière (1862–1954; 1864–1948), French physicists and pioneers of photography and cinematography | DMP · 775 |
| 776 Berbericia | 1914 TY | Adolf Berberich (1861–1920), German astronomer | DMP · 776 |
| 777 Gutemberga | 1914 TZ | Johannes Gutenberg (c. 1400–1468), printing pioneer | DMP · 777 |
| 778 Theobalda | 1914 UA | Theobald Kaiser, father of German discovererFranz Kaiser (1891–1962) | DMP · 778 |
| 779 Nina | 1914 UB | Nina Nikolaevna Neujmina (1877–1956), mathematician and sister of Russian discovererGrigory Neujmin | DMP · 779 |
| 780 Armenia | 1914 UC | The country ofArmenia in the South Caucasus | DMP · 780 |
| 781 Kartvelia | 1914 UF | Kartveli, Georgian name for theGeorgian people | DMP · 781 |
| 782 Montefiore | 1914 UK | Clarice Sebag-Montefiore, wife of Alphonse Mayer Rothschild (1878–1942), the second son of BaronAlbert von Rothschild | DMP · 782 |
| 783 Nora | 1914 UL | Nora, heroine in the playA Doll's House by Norwegian writerHenrik Ibsen (1828–1906) | DMP · 783 |
| 784 Pickeringia | 1914 UM | Edward Charles Pickering (1846–1919) and his brotherWilliam Henry Pickering (1858–1938), both American astronomers | DMP · 784 |
| 785 Zwetana | 1914 UN | Tsvetana Popova, daughter of professor Kyrille Popoff (also Popoff or Pophoff) ofSofia, Bulgaria | DMP · 785 |
| 786 Bredichina | 1914 UO | Fyodor Bredikhin (1831–1904), Russian astronomer | DMP · 786 |
| 787 Moskva | 1914 UQ | The city ofMoscow in Russia | DMP · 787 |
| 788 Hohensteina | 1914 UR | Hohnstein Castle nearBad Schwalbach in Hesse, Germany, hometown of the wife of the discoverer,Franz Kaiser (1891–1962). Her ancestors derive from the castle's Order of Knighthood, "Breder von Hohenstein". | DMP · 788 |
| 789 Lena | 1914 UU | Elena Petrovna Neujmina (1860–1942), mother of the discovererGrigory Neujmin. | DMP · 789 |
| 790 Pretoria | 1912 NW | The city ofPretoria in South Africa | DMP · 790 |
| 791 Ani | 1914 UV | Ani, ruined city inArmenia | DMP · 791 |
| 792 Metcalfia | 1907 ZC | Joel Hastings Metcalf (1866–1925), American Unitarian minister and astronomer | DMP · 792 |
| 793 Arizona | 1907 ZD | The U.S. state ofArizona, where theLowell Observatory is located in Flagstaff | DMP · 793 |
| 794 Irenaea | 1914 VB | Irene Hillebrand, née Weiss, daughter of Austrian astronomerEdmund Weiss (1837–1917), director of theVienna Observatory. The name'saea-suffix was needed to avoid conflict with asteroid14 Irene. | DMP · 794 |
| 795 Fini | 1914 VE | Unknown origin of name. Fini is an Austrian diminutive of Josephine. | DMP · 795 |
| 796 Sarita | 1914 VH | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 796 |
| 797 Montana | 1914 VR | Frommons, the Latin formountain, in honour ofHamburg Observatory, located atBergedorf, in Germany. It was the observatory's first minor-planet discovery | DMP · 797 |
| 798 Ruth | 1914 VT | Ruth, Biblical heroine in the Old Testament | DMP · 798 |
| 799 Gudula | 1915 WO | Gudula, German feminine first name, from the calendarLahrer Hinkender Bote | DMP · 799 |
| 800 Kressmannia | 1915 WP | Major A. Kressmann (or Kreßmann), benefactor who donated the 318-mm Kressmann Refractor to theHeidelberg Observatory, Germany. The telescope was used for Double Star measurements and was hosted in the dome of Heidelberg's Ostinstitut until 1978, when it was replaced by the 50-centimeter telescope (Src). | DMP · 800 |
| Named minor planet | Provisional | This minor planet was named for... | Ref · Catalog |
|---|---|---|---|
| 801 Helwerthia | 1915 WQ | Elise Helwerth–Wolf (1840–1924), mother of the discovererMax Wolf;also see(412) | DMP · 801 |
| 802 Epyaxa | 1915 WR | Epyaxa, queen ofSyennesis, wife to King ofCilicia in South Asia Minor in the 5th century BCE | DMP · 802 |
| 803 Picka | 1915 WS | Friedrich Pick (1867–1921), a Czech physician from Prague who first introducedendoscopy in medicine | DMP · 803 |
| 804 Hispania | 1915 WT | The country ofSpain, named by its Latin name, Hispania. It was the first discovery of an asteroid ever made in Spain. | DMP · 804 |
| 805 Hormuthia | 1915 WW | Hormuth Kopff, wife of German astronomerAugust Kopff, assistant to the discoverer,Max Wolf. | DMP · 805 |
| 806 Gyldénia | 1915 WX | Hugo Gyldén (1841–1896), Swedish astronomer atStockholm Observatory | DMP · 806 |
| 807 Ceraskia | 1915 WY | Vitold Tserasky (1849–1925), also known as Vitold Cerasky or Vitol'd Karlovic Tseraskiy, a Russian astronomer and director at the Moscow Observatory (105). The lunar craterTseraskiy is named after him. His wife,Lidiya Tseraskaya was also an astronomer. | DMP · 807 |
| 808 Merxia | 1901 GY | Adalbert Merx, the father-in-law ofMax Wolf. The discovery was made by his assistantLuigi Carnera at Heidelberg. | DMP · 808 |
| 809 Lundia | 1915 XP | Lund Observatory, located in Lund, southern Sweden | DMP · 809 |
| 810 Atossa | 1915 XQ | Atossa (550–475 BC), ancient Persian queen, daughter ofCyrus, wife ofDarius | DMP · 810 |
| 811 Nauheima | 1915 XR | The town ofBad Nauheim in Hesse, Germany | DMP · 811 |
| 812 Adele | 1915 XV | Adele, character in the operettaDie Fledermaus byJohann Strauss (1825–1899) | DMP · 812 |
| 813 Baumeia | 1915 YR | "H. Baum", a German student of astronomy atHeidelberg University who died inWorld War I | DMP · 813 |
| 814 Tauris | 1916 YT | Tauris, ancient name of theCrimean peninsula(Schmadel says "Tauric Mount", but there is no such mountain) | DMP · 814 |
| 815 Coppelia | 1916 YU | The comic balletCoppélia by composerLéo Delibes (1836–1891) based upon a story byE. T. A. Hoffmann (1776–1822) | DMP · 815 |
| 816 Juliana | 1916 YV | QueenJuliana of the Netherlands (1909–2004) | DMP · 816 |
| 817 Annika | 1916 YW | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 817 |
| 818 Kapteynia | 1916 YZ | Jacobus Kapteyn (1851–1922), Dutch astronomer | DMP · 818 |
| 819 Barnardiana | 1916 ZA | Edward Emerson Barnard (1857–1923), American astronomer | DMP · 819 |
| 820 Adriana | 1916 ZB | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 820 |
| 821 Fanny | 1916 ZC | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 821 |
| 822 Lalage | 1916 ZD | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 822 |
| 823 Sisigambis | 1916 ZG | Sisygambis (died 323 BC), mother ofDarius III of Persia | DMP · 823 |
| 824 Anastasia | 1916 ZH | Anastasia Semenoff, an acquaintance of Russian discovererGrigory Neujmin (1886–1946) | DMP · 824 |
| 825 Tanina | 1916 ZL | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 825 |
| 826 Henrika | 1916 ZO | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 826 |
| 827 Wolfiana | 1916 ZW | Max Wolf (1863–1932), German astronomer | DMP · 827 |
| 828 Lindemannia | 1916 ZX | Adolph Friedrich Lindemann (1846 – 25 August 1931), German-born British amateur astronomer, inventor of the Lindemann electrometer, a quadrantelectrometer | DMP · 828 |
| 829 Academia | 1916 ZY | TheRussian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg, on the occasion of its 200th anniversary | DMP · 829 |
| 830 Petropolitana | 1916 ZZ | The city ofSaint Petersburg, Russia, by its Latin name "Petropolis" | DMP · 830 |
| 831 Stateira | 1916 AA | Stateira (died c. 400 BC), wife ofArtaxerxes II of Persia | DMP · 831 |
| 832 Karin | 1916 AB | Karin Månsdotter (1550–1612), Swedish queen and wife ofEric XIV of Sweden | DMP · 832 |
| 833 Monica | 1916 AC | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 833 |
| 834 Burnhamia | 1916 AD | Sherburne Wesley Burnham (1838–1921), American astronomer who discovered many visual binary stars. He observed from the Chicago (1877),Lick (1888) andYerkes (1897) observatories. | DMP · 834 |
| 835 Olivia | 1916 AE | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 835 |
| 836 Jole | 1916 AF | Iole, wife of divine hero Heracles in Greek mythology | DMP · 836 |
| 837 Schwarzschilda | 1916 AG | Karl Schwarzschild (1873–1916), German physicist and astronomer, best known for his solution of Einstein's field equations, leading to theSchwarzschild radius. He was the director of theGöttingen andPotsdam-Babelsberg observatories. | DMP · 837 |
| 838 Seraphina | 1916 AH | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 838 |
| 839 Valborg | 1916 AJ | Valborg, heroine in the playAxel and Valborg by Danish poet and playwrightAdam Oehlenschläger (1779–1850) | DMP · 839 |
| 840 Zenobia | 1916 AK | Zenobia (died c. 290 AD), a Christian martyr. Alternatively, it may refer toZenobia (c. 240 – c. 274 AD), the queen of thePalmyrene Empire in Syria, who was defeated byAurelian in 272 AD. | DMP · 840 |
| 841 Arabella | 1916 AL | The operaArabella by German composerRichard Strauss (1864–1949) | DMP · 841 |
| 842 Kerstin | 1916 AM | Unknown origin of name. It is a German feminine first name. | DMP · 842 |
| 843 Nicolaia | 1916 AN | Thorvald N. Thiele (1838–1910), Danish astronomer, actuary and mathematician. He is the father of the discovererHolger Thiele. | DMP · 843 |
| 844 Leontina | 1916 AP | The town ofLienz, Austria, birthplace of the asteroid's discoverer,Joseph Rheden (1873–1946) | DMP · 844 |
| 845 Naëma | 1916 AS | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 845 |
| 846 Lipperta | 1916 AT | Eduard Lippert (1844–1925;bio-de), a German businessman and benefactor of theHamburg Observatory, who to donated the "LippertAstrograph". | DMP · 846 |
| 847 Agnia | 1915 XX | Agnia Ivanovna Bad'ina (1877–1956), a Russian physician fromSimeiz, on the Crimean peninsula | DMP · 847 |
| 848 Inna | 1915 XS | Nikolaevna Leman-Balanovskaya (1881–1945), a Russian astronomer at thePulkovo Observatory near St Petersburg | DMP · 848 |
| 849 Ara | 1912 NY | American Relief Administration (ARA), in appreciation of the help it gave during the Russian famine of 1922–1923 | DMP · 849 |
| 850 Altona | 1916 S24 | Altona, Germany, location of theAltona Observatory at whichH. C. Schumacher began publication of the astronomical journalAstronomische Nachrichten in 1821 | DMP · 850 |
| 851 Zeissia | 1916 S26 | Zeiss Optical Works | DMP · 851 |
| 852 Wladilena | 1916 S27 | Vladimir Lenin (1870–1924), Russian communist revolutionary, politician and Soviet leader | DMP · 852 |
| 853 Nansenia | 1916 S28 | Fridtjof Nansen (1861–1930), Norwegian polar explorer | DMP · 853 |
| 854 Frostia | 1916 S29 | Edwin Brant Frost (1866–1935), an American astronomer | DMP · 854 |
| 855 Newcombia | 1916 ZP | Simon Newcomb (1835–1909), a Canadian–American professor of astronomy and director of the U.S. Nautical Almanac Office atUnited States Naval Observatory[9] | DMP · 855 |
| 856 Backlunda | 1916 S30 | Oskar Backlund (1846–1916), Swedish-Russian astronomer | DMP · 856 |
| 857 Glasenappia | 1916 S33 | Sergey Glazenap (1848–1937), a Soviet astronomer, director of both St. Petersburg andPulkovo Observatory and founder of theRussian Astronomical Society | DMP · 857 |
| 858 El Djezaïr | 1916 a | The city ofAlgiers, Algeria by its Arabian name meaning "the islands". | DMP · 858 |
| 859 Bouzaréah | 1916 c | The borough ofBouzaréah, in the city of Algiers, Algeria. It is the site ofAlgiers Observatory. | DMP · 859 |
| 860 Ursina | 1917 BD | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 860 |
| 861 Aïda | 1917 BE | Aïda, opera by the Italian composerGiuseppe Verdi (1813–1901) | DMP · 861 |
| 862 Franzia | 1917 BF | Franz Wolf, son of the discovererMax Wolf | DMP · 862 |
| 863 Benkoela | 1917 BH | The city ofBenkoelen on the island of Sumatra, Indonesia(possibly) | DMP · 863 |
| 864 Aase | A921 SB | Ase (also spelled "Aase") the mother of the title character in the playPeer Gynt by Norwegian poetHenrik Ibsen (1828–1906) | DMP · 864 |
| 865 Zubaida | 1917 BO | Zubaida, a character in the operaAbu Hassan byCarl Maria von Weber (1786–1826) | DMP · 865 |
| 866 Fatme | 1917 BQ | Fatme, a character in the operaAbu Hassan byCarl Maria von Weber (1786–1826) | DMP · 866 |
| 867 Kovacia | 1917 BS | Friedrich Kovacs (1861–1931), physician from Vienna, Austria, who treated the wife of discovererJohann Palisa (Src,Src) | DMP · 867 |
| 868 Lova | 1917 BU | Unknown origin of name | DMP · 868 |
| 869 Mellena | 1917 BV | Werner von Melle (1853–1937), mayor ofHamburg, Germany, who promoted the establishment of theUniversity of Hamburg and founded theHamburg Observatory | DMP · 869 |
| 870 Manto | 1917 BX | Manto, mythological Greek soothsayer, erector of Apollo's oracle in Claros | DMP · 870 |
| 871 Amneris | 1917 BY | Amneris, character inVerdi's operaAida | DMP · 871 |
| 872 Holda | 1917 BZ | Edward S. Holden (1846–1914), American astronomer at Lick Observatory and fifth president of the University of California | DMP · 872 |
| 873 Mechthild | 1917 CA | Unknown origin of name. (Mechthild of Magdeburg?) A feminine first name in German. | DMP · 873 |
| 874 Rotraut | 1917 CC | Likely named after the poemSchön Rotraut (Pretty Rotraut) by German poetEduard Mörike (1804–1875) | DMP · 874 |
| 875 Nymphe | 1917 CF | TheNymphs, Greek mythological figures | DMP · 875 |
| 876 Scott | 1917 CH | Miss E. Scott, of the Society of Friends in Vienna, Austria, a friend of discovererJohann Palisa. This minor planet has also been erroneously attributed to the English polar explorerRobert Falcon Scott | DMP · 876 |
| 877 Walküre | 1915 S7 | Valkyrie (German:Walküre), a female spirit inNorse mythology. Also,Die Walküre is part of Wagner's opera cycleDer Ring des Nibelungen. | DMP · 877 |
| 878 Mildred | 1916 f | Mildred (1915–2016), daughter of American astronomerHarlow Shapley | DMP · 878 |
| 879 Ricarda | 1917 CJ | Ricarda Huch (1864–1947), German poet | DMP · 879 |
| 880 Herba | 1917 CK | Herba, Greek god of misery and poverty | DMP · 880 |
| 881 Athene | 1917 CL | Athena, Greek goddess, also known as Minerva | DMP · 881 |
| 882 Swetlana | 1917 CM | Unknown origin of name. A feminine first name in Russian. | DMP · 882 |
| 883 Matterania | 1917 CP | August Matter, German maker ofphotographic plates (Matterplatten) for the Heidelberg Observatory, which allowedMax Wolf and others to make numerous discoveries. This asteroid was one of them. Matter's factory was later destroyed in World War II. | DMP · 883 |
| 884 Priamus | 1917 CQ | Priam, from Greek mythology. He is the king of Troy during theTrojan War and father of Hector and Paris inHomer'sIliad. | DMP · 884 |
| 885 Ulrike | 1917 CX | Ulrike von Levetzow (1804–1899), a friend and the last love ofJohann Wolfgang von Goethe; alternatively:Ulrica, a character in Verdi's operaUn ballo in maschera | DMP · 885 |
| 886 Washingtonia | 1917 b | George Washington (1732–1799), American general and first president of the United States of America. | DMP · 886 |
| 887 Alinda | 1918 DB | The ancient city ofAlinda in Caria, Asia Minor. Alternatively, Alinda is the Man in the Moon in Australianaboriginal mythology. | DMP · 887 |
| 888 Parysatis | 1918 DC | Parysatis, wife ofDarius II of Persia | DMP · 888 |
| 889 Erynia | 1918 DG | TheErinyes, or Furies, Greek mythological creatures | DMP · 889 |
| 890 Waltraut | 1918 DK | Waltraut, character in the operaGötterdämmerung in theDer Ring des Nibelungen byRichard Wagner | DMP · 890 |
| 891 Gunhild | 1918 DQ | Unknown origin of name. It is a feminine German first name. | DMP · 891 |
| 892 Seeligeria | 1918 DR | Hugo von Seeliger (1849–1924), Austrian-German astronomer | DMP · 892 |
| 893 Leopoldina | 1918 DS | TheGerman Academy of Sciences Leopoldina | DMP · 893 |
| 894 Erda | 1918 DT | Erda, a character in Wagner's opera cycleDer Ring des Nibelungen, who is the goddess of wisdom, fate and Earth. She is based onUrðr (wisdom and fate) andJörð (the personification of Earth) inNorse mythology. | DMP · 894 |
| 895 Helio | 1918 DU | Helium, whose spectrumPaschen andRunge investigated together (Paschen named it at Wolf's request) | DMP · 895 |
| 896 Sphinx | 1918 DV | TheSphinx. The female monster in Greek and Egyption mythology has the head of a woman, the haunches of a lion, and the wings of a bird. It has the habit of killing anyone who cannot answer her riddle. | DMP · 896 |
| 897 Lysistrata | 1918 DZ | The anti-war comedyLysistrata by Aristophanes | DMP · 897 |
| 898 Hildegard | 1918 EA | SaintHildegard of Bingen (1098–1179). The Benedictine abbess is considered to be the founder of scientific natural history in Germany. | DMP · 898 |
| 899 Jokaste | 1918 EB | Jocasta, mother and wife of Oedipus, the mythical Greek king of Thebes | DMP · 899 |
| 900 Rosalinde | 1918 EC | Rosalinde, character in the operaDie Fledermaus byJohann Strauss II (1825–1899) | DMP · 900 |
| Named minor planet | Provisional | This minor planet was named for... | Ref · Catalog |
|---|---|---|---|
| 901 Brunsia | 1918 EE | Heinrich Bruns (1848–1919), German astronomer and director of the Leipzig Observatory (534) | DMP · 901 |
| 902 Probitas | 1918 EJ | Probity, a quality attributed to the late discoverer | DMP · 902 |
| 903 Nealley | 1918 EM | Nealley, amateur astronomer from New York, who contributed to thephotographic star charts edition byMax Wolf andJohann Palisa (discoverer) | DMP · 903 |
| 904 Rockefellia | 1918 EO | John D. Rockefeller (1839–1937), American business man, philanthropist and one of the wealthiest persons in modern history | DMP · 904 |
| 905 Universitas | 1918 ES | University of Hamburg, Germany | DMP · 905 |
| 906 Repsolda | 1918 ET | Johann Georg Repsold (1770–1830), German astronomer, optician and manufacturer ofastrometric instruments | DMP · 906 |
| 907 Rhoda | 1918 EU | Wife of American astronomerEdward Emerson Barnard (1857–1923) | DMP · 907 |
| 908 Buda | 1918 EX | Buda, historic part of the city of part of Budapest, Hungary | DMP · 908 |
| 909 Ulla | 1919 FA | Ulla Ahrens, member of the Ahrens family, who helped financially at theHeidelberg Observatory. Ulla's father was also a friend of the discoverer,Karl Wilhelm Reinmuth (1892–1979). | DMP · 909 |
| 910 Anneliese | 1919 FB | Anneliese, a friend of German astronomer Julius Dick atBabelsberg Observatory, Germany | DMP · 910 |
| 911 Agamemnon | 1919 FD | Agamemnon, from Greek mythology. The king ofMycenae commanded the Greek forces in theTrojan War. | DMP · 911 |
| 912 Maritima | 1919 FJ | Maritima, annual end-of-term excursions on the North Sea organised by theUniversity of Hamburg;also see(947). | DMP · 912 |
| 913 Otila | 1919 FL | Otila, female name chosen by discovererKarl Reinmuth from the calendarDer Lahrer hinkende Bote | DMP · 913 |
| 914 Palisana | 1919 FN | Johann Palisa (1848–1925), Austrian astronomer,discoverer of minor planets, and friend of the discovererMax Wolf | DMP · 914 |
| 915 Cosette | 1918 b | Cosette, youngest daughter of French astronomerFrançois Gonnessiat (1856–1934), who discovered this asteroid | DMP · 915 |
| 916 America | 1915 S1 | America, it was named after the Americas, which is why it was stated that it was named for theAmerican continent | DMP · 916 |
| 917 Lyka | 1915 S4 | Lyka, a friend of the sister of the discoverer,Grigory Neujmin | DMP · 917 |
| 918 Itha | 1919 FR | Itha, female name chosen by discovererKarl Reinmuth from the calendarDer Lahrer hinkende Bote | DMP · 918 |
| 919 Ilsebill | 1918 EQ | Ilsebill, a character in the fairy taleThe Fisherman and his Wife by theBrothers Grimm | DMP · 919 |
| 920 Rogeria | 1919 FT | Female names chosen by discovererKarl Reinmuth from the calendarDer Lahrer hinkende Bote | DMP · 920 |
| 921 Jovita | 1919 FV | DMP · 921 | |
| 922 Schlutia | 1919 FW | Edgar Schlubach, a German businessman from Hamburg, and Henry Frederic Tiarks, FRAS, British banker and amateur astronomer from London, who together financed the expedition to theChristmas Island to observe thesolar eclipse of September 21, 1922 (Src). | DMP · 922 |
| 923 Herluga | 1919 GB | Female names chosen by discovererKarl Reinmuth from the calendarDer Lahrer hinkende Bote | DMP · 923 |
| 924 Toni | 1919 GC | DMP · 924 | |
| 925 Alphonsina | 1920 GM | Alfonso X of Castile (1221–1284) andAlfonso XIII of Spain (1886–1941) | DMP · 925 |
| 926 Imhilde | 1920 GN | Imhilde, female name chosen by discovererKarl Reinmuth from the calendarDer Lahrer hinkende Bote | DMP · 926 |
| 927 Ratisbona | 1920 GO | Latin name of the city ofRegensburg in south-east Germany | DMP · 927 |
| 928 Hildrun | 1920 GP | Female names chosen by discovererKarl Reinmuth from the calendarDer Lahrer hinkende Bote | DMP · 928 |
| 929 Algunde | 1920 GR | DMP · 929 | |
| 930 Westphalia | 1920 GS | The historic region ofWestphalia in Germany, birthplace of the discovererWalter Baade (1893–1960) | DMP · 930 |
| 931 Whittemora | 1920 GU | Thomas Whittemore (1871–1950), American professor at both Harvard and Columbia Universities | DMP · 931 |
| 932 Hooveria | 1920 GV | Herbert Hoover (1874–1964), American president, then secretary of state, in recognition of his help to Austria afterWorld War I | DMP · 932 |
| 933 Susi | 1927 CH | Susi, wife ofKasimir Graff (1878–1950), German astronomer atHamburg Observatory and later director of theVienna Observatory | DMP · 933 |
| 934 Thüringia | 1920 HK | TheThüringia, an Atlantic liner of theHamburg America Line, on which German astronomerWalter Baade travelled on his visits to New York. the captain was an amateur astronomer, and was invited to name one of Baade's asteroids. | DMP · 934 |
| 935 Clivia | 1920 HM | Clivia, genus of flowering plant | DMP · 935 |
| 936 Kunigunde | 1920 HN | Kunigunde, female name chosen by discovererKarl Reinmuth from the calendarDer Lahrer hinkende Bote | DMP · 936 |
| 937 Bethgea | 1920 HO | Hans Bethge (1876–1946), German poet | DMP · 937 |
| 938 Chlosinde | 1920 HQ | Female names chosen by discovererKarl Reinmuth from the calendarDer Lahrer hinkende Bote | DMP · 938 |
| 939 Isberga | 1920 HR | DMP · 939 | |
| 940 Kordula | 1920 HT | DMP · 940 | |
| 941 Murray | 1920 HV | Gilbert Murray (1866–1957), British classical scholar and diplomat who helped Austria in 1920 through theLeague of Nations | DMP · 941 |
| 942 Romilda | 1920 HW | Romilda, female name chosen by discovererKarl Reinmuth from the calendarDer Lahrer hinkende Bote | DMP · 942 |
| 943 Begonia | 1920 HX | Begonia, genus of herbs and flowers | DMP · 943 |
| 944 Hidalgo | 1920 HZ | Miguel Hidalgo (1753–1811), father of the independence ofMexico, where German astronomers went to observe thesolar eclipse of September 10, 1923 | DMP · 944 |
| 945 Barcelona | 1921 JB | Barcelona,Spain, where the discoverer was born and the asteroid discovered | DMP · 945 |
| 946 Poësia | 1921 JC | Poësia, goddess of poetry | DMP · 946 |
| 947 Monterosa | 1921 JD | TheMVMonte Rosa, a ship (of the GermanMonte Klasse) used by theUniversity of Hamburg on their outings on theNorth Sea;also see(912). | DMP · 947 |
| 948 Jucunda | 1921 JE | Jucunda, female name chosen by discovererKarl Reinmuth from the calendarDer Lahrer hinkende Bote | DMP · 948 |
| 949 Hel | 1921 JK | Hel, Norse goddess | DMP · 949 |
| 950 Ahrensa | 1921 JP | The Ahrens family, friends of the discoverer,Karl Reinmuth | DMP · 950 |
| 951 Gaspra | 1916 S45 | The spa town ofGaspra on the Crimean peninsula | DMP · 951 |
| 952 Caia | 1916 S61 | Caia, a character in the novelQuo Vadis byHenryk Sienkiewicz | DMP · 952 |
| 953 Painleva | 1921 JT | Paul Painlevé (1863–1933), French mathematician and politician | DMP · 953 |
| 954 Li | 1921 JU | Lina Alstede Reinmuth, wife of discovererKarl Reinmuth | DMP · 954 |
| 955 Alstede | 1921 JV | DMP · 955 | |
| 956 Elisa | 1921 JW | Elisa Reinmuth, mother of discoverer Karl Reinmuth | DMP · 956 |
| 957 Camelia | 1921 JX | Camellia, genus of flowering plants | DMP · 957 |
| 958 Asplinda | 1921 KC | Bror Ansgar Asplind (1890–1954), Swedish astronomer | DMP · 958 |
| 959 Arne | 1921 KF | Arne Asplind, son of Swedish astronomer Bror Asplind,also see(958) | DMP · 959 |
| 960 Birgit | 1921 KH | Birgit Asplind, daughter of Swedish astronomer Bror Asplind,also see(958) | DMP · 960 |
| 961 Gunnie | 1921 KM | Gunnie Asplind, daughter of Swedish astronomer Bror Asplind,also see(958) | DMP · 961 |
| 962 Aslög | 1921 KP | Aslög, mythological Norse woman | DMP · 962 |
| 963 Iduberga | 1921 KR | Iduberga, female name chosen by discovererKarl Reinmuth from the calendarDer Lahrer hinkende Bote | DMP · 963 |
| 964 Subamara | 1921 KS | Latin for 'very bitter' (referring to the observing conditions at theVienna Observatory) | DMP · 964 |
| 965 Angelica | 1921 KT | Angelica Hartmann, wife of the discoverer,Johannes Franz Hartmann (1865–1936) | DMP · 965 |
| 966 Muschi | 1921 KU | German:Muschi (meaning "Kitty"), nickname ofWalter Baade's wife, who discovered this asteroid | DMP · 966 |
| 967 Helionape | 1921 KV | Adolf von Sonnenthal (1834–1909), an Austrian actor. Helionape is the direct Greek translation of his name (Sonne andTal, tohelio andnape). | DMP · 967 |
| 968 Petunia | 1921 KW | Petunia, a genus of flowering plants | DMP · 968 |
| 969 Leocadia | 1921 KZ | Unknown origin of name. Feminine Russian first name. | DMP · 969 |
| 970 Primula | 1921 LB | The flower genusPrimula (primroses) | DMP · 970 |
| 971 Alsatia | 1921 LF | Alsace, region in eastern France. Originally named "Alsace" by French discovererAlexandre Schaumasse (1882–1958), in 1920, the name was later changed to "Alsatia" by the GermanARI. | DMP · 971 |
| 972 Cohnia | 1922 LK | Fritz Cohn (1866–1922), German astronomer and director of the Astronomisches Rechen-Institut in Berlin | DMP · 972 |
| 973 Aralia | 1922 LR | Aralia, genus of ivy-like plant | DMP · 973 |
| 974 Lioba | 1922 LS | SaintLeoba (or Lioba; c. 710–782), abbess in Tauberbischofsheim, Germany, who helpedSaint Boniface spreading Christianity throughout Germany. | DMP · 974 |
| 975 Perseverantia | 1922 LT | Perseverance | DMP · 975 |
| 976 Benjamina | 1922 LU | Benjamin, son of discovererBenjamin Jekhowsky | DMP · 976 |
| 977 Philippa | 1922 LV | BaronPhilippe de Rothschild (1902–1988), French financier | DMP · 977 |
| 978 Aidamina | 1922 LY | Aida Minaievna, a friend of the family of Soviet discovererSergey Belyavsky | DMP · 978 |
| 979 Ilsewa | 1922 MC | Ilse Waldorf, an acquaintance of German discovererKarl Reinmuth | DMP · 979 |
| 980 Anacostia | 1921 W19 | The historic district ofAnacostia in Washington, D.C., United States, as well as for the nearbyAnacostia River | DMP · 980 |
| 981 Martina | 1917 S92 | Henri Martin (1810–1883), French historian and politician | DMP · 981 |
| 982 Franklina | 1922 MD | John Franklin-Adams (1843–1912), British amateur astronomer and stellar cartographer | DMP · 982 |
| 983 Gunila | 1922 ME | Gunila, female name chosen by discovererKarl Reinmuth from the calendarDer Lahrer hinkende Bote | DMP · 983 |
| 984 Gretia | 1922 MH | Gretia, sister-in-law of German astronomer Albrecht Kahrstedt (1897–1971),also see(1587) | DMP · 984 |
| 985 Rosina | 1922 MO | Rosina, female name chosen by discovererKarl Reinmuth from the calendarDer Lahrer hinkende Bote | DMP · 985 |
| 986 Amelia | 1922 MQ | Amelia, wife of discovererJosep Comas i Solà | DMP · 986 |
| 987 Wallia | 1922 MR | Wallia, female name chosen by discovererKarl Reinmuth from the calendarDer Lahrer hinkende Bote | DMP · 987 |
| 988 Appella | 1922 MT | Paul Émile Appell (1855–1930), French astronomer | DMP · 988 |
| 989 Schwassmannia | 1922 MW | Arnold Schwassmann (1870–1964), German astronomer, discoverer of minor planets and comets atPotsdam-Babelsberg andHamburg-Bergedorf observatories | DMP · 989 |
| 990 Yerkes | 1922 MZ | Yerkes Observatory, in Williams Bay, Wisconsin, United States, where this asteroid was discovered | DMP · 990 |
| 991 McDonalda | 1922 NB | McDonald Observatory, Texas, United States, originally endowed by the Texas bankerWilliam Johnson McDonald | DMP · 991 |
| 992 Swasey | 1922 ND | Ambrose Swasey (1846–1937), American benefactor and mechanical engineer, co-founder, withWorcester Reed Warner of the Warner & Swasey Company which manufactured astronomical telescopes and precision instruments, including the 82-inchOtto Struve Telescope for the McDonald Observatory, one of the largest telescopes at the time. They gave their own observatory to Case Western University and it took the nameWarner and Swasey Observatory. | DMP · 992 |
| 993 Moultona | 1923 NJ | Forest Ray Moulton (1872–1952), American astronomer and mathematician | DMP · 993 |
| 994 Otthild | 1923 NL | Otthild, female name chosen by discovererKarl Reinmuth from the calendarDer Lahrer hinkende Bote | DMP · 994 |
| 995 Sternberga | 1923 NP | Pavel Shternberg (1865–1920), Russian astronomer | DMP · 995 |
| 996 Hilaritas | 1923 NM | Contentedness | DMP · 996 |
| 997 Priska | 1923 NR | Priska, female name chosen by discovererKarl Reinmuth from the calendarDer Lahrer hinkende Bote | DMP · 997 |
| 998 Bodea | 1923 NU | Johann Elert Bode (1747–1826), German astronomer, author of theBerliner Astronomisches Jahrbuch, known for the empiricalTitius–Bode law about the sequence of planetary distances | DMP · 998 |
| 999 Zachia | 1923 NW | Franz Xaver von Zach (1754–1832), Hungarian astronomer and director of the Seeberg Observatory (279) in Germany | DMP · 999 |
| 1000 Piazzia | 1923 NZ | Giuseppe Piazzi (1746–1826), Italian astronomer and discoverer ofCeres in 1801 | DMP · 1000 |
| Preceded by — | Meanings of minor-planet names List of minor planets: 1–1,000 | Succeeded by |