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meaning of names

The Origins and Meaning of Names
================================

This article categorizes different naming traditions and customs.
It also describes origins and meanings of surnames from around the
world. It should help both novice and seasoned genealogy
researchers.

Have you ever had the experience where your name was misspelled -
perhaps on an account or in a letter? What are the typical
misspellings or pronunciation errors associated with your name? It
strikes one very personally because name is your possession and
identification, and it tells the world who you are. Historically,
names have served as a fingerprint of life, perhaps a basic clue
to one's personality. Knowledge of naming practices in our
ancestral country of origin can help us trace our respective
families back to a village or a place, tell us their occupation,
or it can give us an idea about what our ancestors looked like.
The intriguing story of surnames dates back thousands of years.
How and where they began, what their original meanings were, and
their various spellings, is called the study of onomastics.














Quick Links to Origins of Last Names Around the World

African American names

American Indian names

Belgian last names

Chinese last names

Czech last names

Danish last names

Dutch last names

French last names

German last names

Greek last names

Hebrew last names


The first known people to acquire surnames were the Chinese.
Legends suggest that the Emperor Fushi decreed the use of
surnames, or family names, about 2852 BC. The Chinese customarily
have three names. The surname is placed first and comes from one
of the 438 words in the sacred Chinese poem Po-Chia-Hsing. The
family name is followed by a generation name, taken from a poem of
30 characters adopted by each family. The given name is then
placed last.

In early times, the Romans had only one name. However, they later
changed to using three names. The given name stood first and was
called a "praenomen." This was followed by the "nomen" which
designates the gens, or clan. The last name designates the family
and is known as the "cognomen," Some Romans added a fourth name,
the "agnomen," to commemorate an illustrious action, or remarkable
event. As the Roman Empire began to decline, family names became
confused and single names once again became customary.

During the early Middle Ages, people were referred to by a single
given name. But gradually the custom of adding another name as a
way to distinguish individuals gained popularity. Certain distinct
traits became commonly used as a part of this practice. For
instance, the place of birth: St. Francis of Assisi; a descriptive
characteristic: Lambert Le Tort, an Old French poet whose name
means "Lambert the Nisted;" the person's occupation: Piers,
Plowman; or the use of the father's name: Leif Ericsson.

By the 12th century, the use of a second name had become so
widespread that, in some places, it was considered vulgar not to
have one. However, even though this custom was the source of all
surnames used today, the second names used in the early Middle
Ages did not apply to families, nor were they hereditary.

Whether these second names evolved into fixed, hereditary surnames
is difficult to pinpoint with any accuracy since the practice
advanced slowly over a period of several hundreds of years. Many
fixed surnames existed alongside the more temporary bynames and
descriptive terms used by the people as second names.

The modern hereditary use of surnames is a practice that
originated among the Venetian aristocracy in Italy about the 10th
or 11th centuries. Crusaders returning from the Holy Land took
note of this custom and soon spread its use throughout Europe.
France, the British isles, and then Germany and Spain began
applying the practice as the need to distinguish individuals
became more important. By the 1370's the word "Surname" was found
in documents, and had come to acquire some emotive and dynastic
significance. Men sometimes sought to keep their surname alive by
encouraging a collateral to adopt it when they had no direct
descendants of their own in the male line, Although we can see
that the handing on of a surname has become a matter of pride, we
can only guess as to the reasons for adopting hereditary surnames
in the first place.

Government became more and more a matter of written record. As the
activities of government, particularly in the levying of taxation
and the exaction of military service, touched an ever widening
range of the population, perhaps it became necessary to identify
individuals accurately. in some of the larger urban communities
especially, personal names were no longer sufficient to
distinguish people for social as well as administrative purposes.
in the countryside, manorial administration, with its stress on
hereditary succession to land, needed some means of keeping track
of families and not just of individuals. We can be certain that by
about 1450 at the latest, most people of whatever social rank had
a fixed, hereditary surname. This surname identified the family,
provided a link with the family's past, and would preserve its
identity in the future. It is not surprising that the preservation
of surnames became a matter of family pride. It was a cause for
much regret if a man had no male descendants to whom he could pass
on the surname he himself had inherited and had home with pride.

Beginning in the 15th and 16th centuries, family names gained in
popularity in Poland and Russia. The Scandinavian countries, bound
by their custom of using the father's name as a second name,
didn't begin using family surnames until the 19th century, Turkey
waited until 1933, when the government forced the practice on its
people.


Irish last names

Italian last names

Japanese last names

Polish last names

Portuguese last names

Russian last names

Scottish last names

Spanish last names

Swedish and Norwegian last names

Swiss last names

Welsh last names

In nearly every case, surnames were first used by the nobility and
wealthy landowners, and the practice then trickled down to the
merchants and commoners. The first permanent names were those of
barons and landowners who derived their names from the manors and
fiefs. These names became fixed through the hereditary nature of
their lands. For the members of the working and middle classes
seeking status, the practices of the nobility were imitated,
leading to the widespread use of surnames.

It would be a difficult task to work out a simple classification
of family names due to spelling and pronunciation changes over the
years. Many old words had different meanings, or are now obsolete.
Many family names were dependent on the competency and discretion
of the writer. The same name can sometimes be spelled in different
ways even in the same document.

Family names have come down to us in various ways. They may have
grown out of a person's surroundings or job, or the name of an
ancestor. Most surnames evolved from four general sources;

Occupation

The local house builder, food preparer, grain grinder and suit
maker, would be named: John Carpenter, John Cook, John Miller and
John Taylor. The person who made barrels was called cooper. The
blacksmith was called Smith. Every village had its share of
Smiths, Carpenters and Millers. The millers in one town weren't
necessarily related to the Millers in the next town.

Location

The John who lived over the hill became known as John Overhill;
the one who dwelled near a stream might be dubbed John Brook, Many
locational surnames originated as place names. You can tell that a
surname is a locational place name if it ends with one of the
regular place name elements, such as -hill, -ford, -wood, -brook,
-well, and so on. Less easily recognized locational surnames end
with -ton, -ham, -wick, -stead meaning a farm, or small
settlement. Other common locational endings are -don, (a hill),
-bury (a fortification) or -leigh, or -ley (a clearing).

Patronymic (father's name)

Many of these surnames can be recognized by the ten-nination son,
such as Williamson, Jackson, etc. Some endings used by other
countries to indicate "son" are: Armenians - ian; Danes and
Norwegians - sen; Finns - nen; Greeks - poulos; Spaniards - ez;
and Poles - wiecz, Prefixes denoting "son" are the Welsh - Ap, the
Scots and Irish - Mac, and the Normans - Fitz. So, John the son of
Randolph became John fitz-Randolph because "fitz" means son of."
In Wales, David the son of John tacked ap" in front of his
father's name, and David ap John was soon being called David
Upjohn. in Scotland, Gilleain's descendants were known as
MacGilleain and later shortened to Madeab, McClean, McLane, and
all the other versions.

Characteristic

An unusually small person might be labeled Small, Short, Little or
Lyfle, A large man might be named Longfellow, Large, Lang or Long.
Many persons having characteristics of a certain animal would be
given the animal's name. Examples: a sly person might be named
Fox; a good swimmer, Fish; a quiet man, Dove; etc.

Many historians believe that surnames derived from places
(locational) were the first to become hereditary. Surnames
evolving from nicknames or descriptive traits (characteristic) are
also of early origin. Surnames taken from occupations came later,
and those of patronymic origin were the last to become hereditary.
Even though patronymic names have been in use a long time, they
would change with every generation: William's son John would be
known as John Williamson, while his son William would be William
Johnson. Surnames that are the most fun, the most surprising and
sometimes even embarrassing, are the characteristic names. one
word of caution, though: do not be distressed if your name
originally meant something you consider uncomplimentary.

Remember that definition may have applied to someone who lived
centuries ago. There are obvious characteristic surnames,
including Longfellow, Redd (one with red hair), and White (white
complexion or hair), and their Italian and German counterparts,
Bianco and Weiss. You cannot always take at face value what names
seem to mean, because changes in word meanings over the centuries.
Hence the English name Stout, which brings to mind a rather fat
fellow, is actually indicative of an early ancestor who was easily
irritated, a noisy fellow. There are some names that leave us with
an immediate picture of a person with a most distinctive physical
characteristic: Stradling, an English name meaning one with bowed
legs; the French Beaudry, -one with good bearing, beautiful; and
the Irish Balfe - one who stammered and stuttered. Many surnames
have more than one origin. For instance, the English surname
"Bell" may designate one who lived or worked at the sign of the
bell, or it may refer to a bell-ringer, or bellmaker. It may from
the Old French word "bell" or pet form of Isabel.


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Spelling Variations of the Family Names

When you begin to do more extensive research on your surname you
may have difficulty finding it with the exact spelling which you
use today. it, in fact may very well have been spelled differently
hundreds of years ago, or you may even know of someone in your
family's past who actually changed his name. The more research you
do, the more likely you'll find several different spellings.
Language changes, carelessness and a high degree of illiteracy
(sometimes the man himself did not know how to spell his own name)
compounded the number of ways a name might be spelled. Often the
town clerk spelled the name the way it sounded to him.

When you begin your own intensive research in to your genealogy
you will very likely need to consult many sources outside your
immediate family. One type of source which you may find especially
useful is fists of name - forms, their meaning and variant
spellings. Such fists, along with more extensive onomastic
dictionaries, now exist for many nationalities and name-groups.
You will need to be alert to a wide range of spelling variations.
Many names became altered in moving from one language to another.
Thus, the German name Metzger (occupational in origin) became
Butcher in English. Often, names were changed for political or
social reasons, to blur or obscure ancestral associations which at
a given time a family may have considered a liability. Some
spellings may have been altered for the sake of simplification,
thus losing their relational, occupational or locational prefixes
and suffixes. For example, the surname "Rosenthal" - a valley
where roses grow - may have been shortened to Rosen or Rose. With
the exception of some place-names which still survive, most
ancient Gaelic names in Ireland, Scotland, and Wales have largely
disappeared under their Anglicized forms: "Mac an
Bhreitheamhnaigh," meaning son of a judge, may have become Briany
or Brien, or Abraham (pronounced eh' brum), or even judge by
translation. The Gaelic "ua," meaning grandson of, changed first
to 0, then to 0', and was finally even dropped by some families.
Many of these dropped familial prefixes have since been restored,
but is likely that some accidental changes have entered the
transactions.

We have mentioned the most common sources from which surnames are
derived. We must now examine some of the idiosyncracies for name
giving for the country of origin. Different cultures had different
ways of choosing names for their offspring. Below are various
nationalities and ethnic groups and some of the ways in which
their names are derived.

The Origins of Surnames Around the World

Although your last name offers you the most substantial clues to
your family history, first and middle names can also be valuable
in tracing your family tree. We generally think of names with
three parts: first, middle and last. First names are called
"given" or "Christian" names, because early Christians changed
their pagan first names to Christian names at baptism.

Most first names used in the Western World today originate from
five languages: Hebrew, Teutonic (which included Germanic), Greek,
Latin and Celtic (which includes Irish, Welsh and Scottish).

It's fascinating to learn how easily first names fall into obvious
categories. Hebrew contributed biblical names, and about one-half
of the English-speaking population have first names from the New
Testament such as Elizabeth, Mary, John and Joseph. The Teutonic
tongues gave us names linked with warlike characteristics, such as
Charles (to become adult), or Ethel (noble). The Greek, Latin and
Celtic languages also gave us names for personal characteristics
and abstract qualities, For example, the Greek name Andrew means
"manly," the Greek Dorothy is "gift of God," the Latin Victor
means "victory in battle," and the Latin Laura translates to "the
air." Names of Celtic origin are almost poetic, such as Kevin
meaning "gentle and beloved" and Morgan meaning "sea dweller."

While there is a wealth of first names available, the actual
selection process has been somewhat limited. it is necessary to
remember that in 1545 the Catholic Church made the use of a
saint's name mandatory for baptism, so for centuries first names
have been confined to the John - and -Mary tradition. in fact, in
all western countries during the Middle Ages, there were only
about twenty common names for infant boys and girls. And John and
Mary were most frequently used. In the 1600's the Protestants
rejected anything associated with Catholicism, so in came names
from the Old Testament, such as Elijah, Priscilla and Joshua.

Middle names weren't used until the 15th century when a second
"first" name was used as a status symbol by German nobility. Many
years passed before this practice became widespread, and in the
United States, it did not become popular until after the
Revolutionary War, when the fashion was to use the mother's maiden
name.

Perhaps you have or will come across an ancestor's name with what
appears to be a fide. For example, "Esquire" following a name
meant someone much respected, one step away from a knight.
"Gentleman" was one step down from an Esquire. The title "Goodman"
(or a woman was called "Goody" or "Goodwife") meant the person was
head of a household. Many other terms from our past have changed
meaning. Esquire and Gentleman were expanded through the years to
include persons with special social standing in the community -
doctors, clergymen, lawyers. Also "Senior" and "Junior" placed
immediately following a name did not necessarily imply a father -
and - son relationship. They could have been an uncle and nephew
who bore the same name and lived near each other. The term cousin
was widely used to mean "an extended family," not legally just the
child of an aunt or uncle.

Belgian

Belgian surnames are either of French or Dutch Origin. In the
North, surnames tend to be of a Dutch origin and are similar in
nature to those found in the Netherlands. The remainder of the
country falls under French influence, particulary the Walloon
dialect, and surnames from these areas resemble those of the
French.

Chinese

Although China has over one billion people, there are
approximately 1000 surnames, and only 60 of these are common. Most
Chinese surnames are only one syllable and are characteristic of
descriptive in origin. The most common Chinese names are Wang
(yellow, Wong (field or wide water), Chan (old) and Chew
(mountain). Since almost all Chinese names are one syllable and
easy to pronounce, and because of strong Chinese family and
ancestral ties, few names have been changed. The Chinese still
place their surnames first, although this practice is no longer
followed by the Chinese people living in Western countries.

Czech

Czech surnames are related to Polish surnames, but they tend to be
shorter and easier to pronounce, since they contain fewer
consonants. It is common to find a Czech surname derived from a
nickname and diminutive forms are also widespread. Many Czechs
have German or "Germanicized" names. Some interesting Czech
surnames include the following: Hovorka (one who was overly
talkative), Kostal (a dweller in a field where cabbages have been
cut) and Metnick (one who ground grain, a miller).

Danish

The vast majority of Danish names are patronymic in origin and end
in -sen. Prior to the late 1860's, these surnames were not
hereditary, but changed with each generation. The son of Jorgen
Petersen would be known by the surname Jorgensen. In 1904 the
Danish Government began to encourage the use of surnames other
than the traditional -sen names, and many people then added a
place or occupational name to their -sen name by hyphenating the
two. Other Danish surnames include: Henricksen (the son of Henry;
home rule), Krogh (a worker in an inn, or dweller in a corner),
Pedersen (the son of Peter; a rock) and Jorgenson (the son of
George; farin er).

Dutch

The use of hereditary family surnames began in the 13th and 14th
centuries but did not spread to the Low Countries until the middle
of the 17th century. Many Dutch names are recognized by the
prefixes van, van der, van den, and ver which mean "from" or "from
the." The Dutch van is not like the German von which designates
nobility. Characteristic nicknames were also used as surnames by
the Dutch, and, like many other cultures, patronymics which
changed with each generation were long a fixture in the Dutch name
system. The following surnames are of Dutch origin: Drukker (one
who prints or works as a pressman), Zylstra (a dweller near a
lock, or drainage sluice), Groen (the young, inexperienced,
vigorous person) and Hartig (a strong, robust man).

English

By the end of the 13th century, Englishmen and English personal
names were to be found not just in England but in many parts of
Scotland, Wales and Ireland as well. These personal names were
derived from a variety of sources. Some were biblical in origin,
or were the names of saints and martyrs of the early Christian
Church. Many were Norman, and a handful were Anglo-Saxon survivals
or revivals. Also, saints who were popular in particular regions,
such as Cuthbert in the north, might influence the choice of
personal names in those regions. The following surnames are of
English origin and their usage spread throughout Great Britain:
Palmer (a palm-bearing pilgrim returned from the holy land),
Weedman (one in charge of a heathen temple), Yale (a dweller at a
corner, nook, or secret place) and Schoolcraft (a dweller in a hut
in a small field or enclosure).

Edited by Lionel E. Mayrand from an orginal article contained in
the Mayrand Archives.

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