Beltinci was attested as Belethfalua in 1322, Belethafalua in 1381, and Balatincz in 1402. The name is originally a plural demonym derived from the Slavic personal name *Běletinъ—from the nickname *Bělъ(jъ) 'white', applied to people with fair skin or hair—thus meaning 'residents of Běletinъ's village'. The second e in the reconstructed name *Beletinci was lost in Slovene due to syncope.[7]
Jewish community
Until 1937, there was a Jewish Orthodoxsynagogue in Beltinci. It was built in 1860 and served the local Jewish community. On April 26, 1944, all of the Jews of the town were deported to the Auschwitz extermination camp, from which none of them returned.[8]
^Novak, Vilko. 2006. Slovar stare knjižne prekmurščine. Ljubljana: ZRC SAZU, p. vi.
^Varga, Júlia. 2004. Magyarországi diákok a Habsburg Birodalom kisebb egyetemein és akadémiáin, 1560–1789. Budapest: Eötvös Loránd Tudományegyetem Levéltára, p. 129.
^Radkersburg und Luttenberg (map, 1:75,000). 1914. Vienna: K.u.k. Militärgeographisches Institut.
^Engelke, Edda, & Mateja Čoh. 2011. "Jeder Flüchtling ist eine Schwächung der Volksdemokratie": die illegalen Überschreitungen am jugoslawisch-steirischen Grenzabschnitt in den Fünfzigerjahren. Vienna: Lit Verlag, p. 333.
^Savnik, Roman (1980). Krajevni leksikon Slovenije, vol. 4. Ljubljana: Državna založba Slovenije. p. 283.
^Snoj, Marko (2009). Etimološki slovar slovenskih zemljepisnih imen. Ljubljana: Modrijan. p. 56.