https://www.theguardian.com/science/2016/nov/17/dictionary-of-50000-surnames-and-their-origins-published
Four-year study by
linguists and historians of British and Irish records back to 11th century
analyses family names
“What’s in a name?” Juliet asked as she and Romeo tried to puzzle their
way around the troubling problem of their warring families. Well, plenty, the
most detailed investigation into surnames in the UK and Ireland has found.
A team of researchers has spent four years studying the meanings and
origins of almost 50,000 surnames, from the most common to the highly obscure.
Some names have been around for many centuries while other more recent
arrivals are explained for the first time in the work, the Oxford Dictionary of
Family Names in Britain and Ireland, which is published on Thursday.
Richard Coates, professor of linguistics at the University of the
West of England (UWE), said there was great interest in the origins of family
names. (His own may stem from one of the numerous places called Coates, or from
the Old English cot, for cottage or workman’s hut.)
About half of the 20,000 most common names are
locative, meaning they come from places; a quarter are relationship names, such
as Dawson; and a fifth are nicknames.
About 8% are occupational, including less familiar
ones such as Beadle (church official), Rutter (musician), and Baxter (baker).
The nicknames are not always straightforward: the early Shorts may have earned
theirs because they were tall.
On the team were historical linguists, medieval
historians, lexicographers and expert advisers on Irish, Scottish, Welsh and
recent immigrant names. They analysed records from published and unpublished
sources dating from the 11th to the 19th century to pinpoint new and detailed
explanations for names. They looked at names that could be found in just about
every corner of the British Isles, and ones attached to as few as 100 people.
Each entry includes the frequencies of the name at the
time of the 1881 and 2011 censuses, its main location in Britain and Ireland,
its language or culture of origin, and, wherever possible, an explanation
supported by historical evidence for the name. Much of this evidence is new,
drawn from previously untapped medieval and modern sources such as tax records,
church registers and census returns.
The study concludes that nearly 40,000 family names
are native to Britain and Ireland, while the remainder reflect the diverse
languages and cultures of immigrants who have settled since the 16th century,
including French Huguenot, Dutch, Jewish, Indian, Arabic, Korean, Japanese,
Chinese and African arrivals.
AHRC has awarded UWE Bristol a further grant to
continue the project so that another 15,000 surnames with just 20 current
bearers or more can be included.
The Oxford Dictionary of Family Names in Britain and
Ireland is published in hardback print format (four volumes), ebook format and
for library subscription online via Oxford Reference for a UK retail price of
£400.
The dictionary will be accessible via public libraries
that purchase the resource. Members of the public can request that their
library purchase the dictionary by completing a form at https://global.oup.com/academic/library-recommend/
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