There Are 7 Types of English Surnames — Which One
Is Yours?
From Ancestry.com
Many of us have surnames passed down
to us from ancestors in England.
Last names weren’t widely used until after the Norman conquest in 1066, but as
the country’s population grew, people found it necessary to be more specific
when they were talking about somebody else. Thus arose descriptions like Thomas
the Baker, Norman son of Richard, Henry the Whitehead, Elizabeth of the Field,
and Joan of York that, ultimately, led to many of our current surnames.
There are perhaps 45,000 different English surnames, but most
had their origins as one of these seven types.
Occupational
Occupational names identified people
based on their job or position in society. Calling a man “Thomas Carpenter”
indicated that he worked with wood for a living, while someone named Knight
bore a sword. Other occupational names include Archer, Baker, Brewer, Butcher,
Carter, Clark, Cooper, Cook, Dyer, Farmer, Faulkner, Fisher, Fuller, Gardener,
Glover, Head, Hunt or Hunter, Judge, Mason, Page, Parker, Potter, Sawyer,
Slater, Smith, Taylor, Thatcher, Turner, Weaver, Woodman, and Wright (or
variations such as Cartwright and Wainwright) — and there are many more.
This kind of name also gave a clue
about whom a servant worked for. Someone named Vickers might have been a
servant to Mr. Vicker, and someone named Williams might either have served a
William or been adopted by him.
From the obscure fact department: In
medieval England, before the time of professional theater, craft guilds put on
“mystery plays” (“mystery” meaning “miracle”), which told Bible stories and had
a call-and-response style of singing. A participant’s surname — such as King,
Lord, Virgin, or Death — may have reflected his or her role, which some people
played for life and passed down to their eldest son.
Describing a personal characteristic
Some names, often adjectives, were
based on nicknames that described a person. They may have described a person’s
size (Short, Long, Little), coloring (Black, White, Green, or Red, which could
have evolved into “Reed”), or another character trait (Stern, Strong, Swift).
Someone named Peacock might have been considered vain.
A last name may have pointed to
where a person was born, lived, worked, or owned land. It might be from the
name of a house, farm, hamlet, town, or county. Some examples: Bedford, Burton,
Hamilton, Hampshire, Sutton. Writer Jack London’s stepfather may have hailed
from London.
From an English place
nameA last name may have pointed to where a person was born, lived, worked, or owned land. It might be from the name of a house, farm, hamlet, town, or county. Some examples: Bedford, Burton, Hamilton, Hampshire, Sutton. Writer Jack London’s stepfather may have hailed from London.
From the name of an estate
Those descended from landowners may
have taken as their surname the name of their holdings, castle, manor, or
estate, such as Ernle or Staunton. Windsor is a famous example — it was the
surname George V adopted for the British royal family.
From a geographical feature of the
landscape
Some examples are Bridge, Brooks,
Bush, Camp, Fields, Forest, Greenwood, Grove, Hill, Knolles, Lake, Moore,
Perry, Stone, Wold, Wood, and Woodruff. Author Margaret Atwood is probably
descended from someone who lived “at the wood.”
Patronymic, matronymic, or ancestral
Patronymic surnames (those that come
from a male given name) include Benson (“the son of Ben”), Davis, Dawson,
Evans, Harris, Harrison, Jackson, Jones (Welsh for John), Nicholson,
Richardson, Robinson, Rogers, Simpson, Stephenson, Thompson, Watson, and
Wilson.
Matronymic ones, surnames derived
from a female given name, include Molson (from Moll, for Mary), Madison (from
Maud), Emmott (from Emma), and Marriott (from Mary).
Scottish clan names make up one set
of ancestral surnames. These include Armstrong, Cameron, Campbell, Crawford,
Douglas, Forbes, Grant, Henderson, Hunter, MacDonald, and Stewart.
Signifying patronage
Some surnames honored a patron.
Hickman was Hick’s man (Hick being a nickname for Richard). Kilpatrick was a
follower of Patrick.
Wondering whether your family name
is English? Try plugging your surname into the Ancestry Last Names Meanings and Origins
widget. Type in the surname “Duffield,” and you’ll see it’s English, a
“habitational name from places in Derbyshire and East Yorkshire, so named from
Old English Dufe ‘dove’ + feld ‘open country.’”
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