In antiquity, the city was named
Epidamnos (Ἐπίδαμνος) and
Dyrrhachion (Δυρράχιον) in
Greek, corresponding to Latin
Epidamnus and
Dyrrachium. The name
Dyrrhachion is usually explained as a Greek compound from
δυσ- 'bad' and
ῥαχία'rocky shore, flood, roaring waves', an explanation already hinted at in antiquity by Cassius Dio, who writes it referred to the difficulties of the rocky coastline, while also reporting that other Roman authors linked it to the name of an
eponymous hero
Dyrrachius. The modern names of the city in Albanian (
Durrës) and Italian (
Durazzo) are derived from
Dyrrachium through the Medieval Slavic form
Дърачь (Dŭračĭ) (modern Serbian:
Драч/Drač (Dratch)), from the era when the city was held by the Bulgarian and Serbian empires. This is also the root of the Ottoman Turkish name
Dıraç.
In English usage, the Italian form Durazzo used to be widespread, but the local Albanian name Durrës has gradually replaced it in recent decades.