1 / 22

Where Surnames Come From (From Bill Bryson’s “Mother Tongue”)

Where Surnames Come From (From Bill Bryson’s “Mother Tongue”). Alan D. DeSantis. No Last Name Needed. For most of history, there was no need for surnames/last names Two “ Peters ” living in the same town would be given second names to distinguish them. Bureaucracy Changes Everything!.

imaran
Télécharger la présentation

Where Surnames Come From (From Bill Bryson’s “Mother Tongue”)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Where Surnames Come From(From Bill Bryson’s “Mother Tongue”) Alan D. DeSantis

  2. No Last Name Needed • For most of history, there was no need for surnames/last names • Two “Peters” living in the same town would be given second names to distinguish them

  3. Bureaucracy Changes Everything! • Two events in England led to the creation and use of last names: • 1) • 2) • These two pieces of medieval bureaucracy meant

  4. Four Sources • British surnames (family names) have four main sources: • 1) • 2) • 3) • 4)

  5. I. Many were identified by their occupations

  6. I. Occupations • NameMeaning • Archer • Barber • Brewer • Bowman • Bishop • Butcher • Baker • Carpenter • Fletcher • Clark • Wright –

  7. I. Occupations • NameMeaning • Hall • Forrester • Fuller • Miller • Shepherd • Smith • Taylor • Turner • King • Bush-

  8. What about Church names? • Keeping in mind that Catholic priests took pledges of celibacy, how did names like Bishop, Monk, Priest, Pope, or Prior survive?

  9. The Same Throughout Europe • Tracing non-English names is not so easy, but with a little translation, they too make sense.

  10. II. Others were named for where they lived or a geographical landmark identified with them

  11. II. Places • NameMeaning • Devon • Allen • Atwater • French • Lincoln • Kent • Preston

  12. II. Places • NameMeaning • Scott • Underwood • Moore • Wood • Ash or Oak • Walsh • Street or Lane

  13. Why not more Londons?(or Farmers) • If everyone from London was known as “London,” surnames would be useless • Consequently, only people who left London were named for the city • “Peter from London” or Peter London

  14. III. Some were named after a distinguishing characteristic

  15. Nicknames • NameMeaning • Armstrong • Boyd • Campbell • Goldwater • Cox • Brown • Kennedy • Morgan • Russell • Whistler • Whitehead • Tolstoy • Machiavelli • Cicero

  16. IV. Finally, many were identified by their family relationships

  17. Relations • NameMeaning • Johnson • Robinson • MacDonald • O'Connor • Thompson • Young • Johansson • Jackson • Brothers

  18. First Names as Last Names • If you have a first name as a last name, the “son” has probably been dropped.

  19. V. Difficulties in identifying some last names and their origins

  20. A. What About Tracing African American Names? • Question: • How do African Americans trace their African names? • Answer: • They can’t! • African slaves were stripped of their surnames • Last names come from 4 different sources: 1) 2) 3) 4)

  21. B. What About Non-English Names? • All of our accentors were immigrants • Except full-blooded native Americans, of course • Many (non-English) immigrants’ names were changed & simplified at their Port of Entries • Pfoersching to Pershing • Wistinghausen to Westinghouse • Pappadimitracoupolos to Pappas • Niewhuis to Newhouse • Kuiper to Cooper • Krankheit to Cronkite

  22. C. Creative Spelling of Names • Until the late 1600s, there were no codified rules for spelling • Spelling was individualized, idiosyncratic, and creative • Consequently, “Hill” was spelled “Hull,” “Hall,” & “Holl” depending on one’s dialect and pronunciation

More Related