18th century english surnames
[PDF File]Surname Spelling in Early America 1 Standardized Spelling ...
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GAYs of the mid-18th century western Virginia frontier. The standard spelling of the surname is unequivocally “Gay”, and “gay” is a common enough word in the English language that its standardized spelling thus in print, probably goes back at least to the 15th century when printed books first became available. Moreover, however rough ...
[PDF File]The Gypsy Surname Index of Great Britain Updated 21/03/2009
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(Ref Victorian prisoners Aylesbury Gaol in the 19th Century) ACKLETON/AKLETON (Ref Gypsies Passing Through) ACKROYD 1891 Yorkshire (See Robert Dawson ARITF) ACOME, Buckinghamshire (See Robert Dawson ARITF) ADAMS ( 1726-1909 (Ref Journal of the Romany and Traveller Family History Society) ADCOCK 1851 Norfolk (See Robert Dawson ARITF)
[PDF File]Descriptions of Eighteenth-Century Charles Town by John ...
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from an English explorer in 1700, a South Carolina resident in 1742, a German clergyman in 1750, a Philadelphia merchant in 1765, and a British ship captain in 1769. ... National Humanities Center Descriptions of 18th-Century Charleston before the Revolution. 2
The Scots-Irish Immigrant before Colonial America
the Battle of the Boyne.12 During the last half of the seventeenth century, the Scots in Ulster attempted to increase their personal prosperity and social status and flourished in an atmosphere of relative religious freedom—all achievements to be repeated after some of them migrated in the eighteenth century.
[PDF File]LIST OF COLONIAL IMMIGRANTS - Royal Ancestry
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The following alphabetized list includes the names of the seventeenth-century immigrants whose Plantagenet ancestry is the subject of this book, together with several immigrants after 1701 who have been incidentally noted in the text or a footnote. The names of women have been provided with a cross-reference to the surname of the husband(s). l.
[PDF File]FOUNDERS OF NEW JERSEY
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English settlements and their colonists, 138 biographies of founders of New Jersey researched and written by their descendants. The Genealogical Index of Names includes, not only those of founders documented by society members, but also over 2000 genealogical references in the biographies such as spouses, subsequent
[PDF File]A Guide to Eighteenth-Century English Vocabulary
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A Guide to Eighteenth-Century English Vocabulary &C. —A form of etc. Et cetera is Latin for “and other things”; the ampersand stands for the and— Latin et. (The ampersand is an old way of writing et; you can almost make out the e and the t in the italic ampersand:&.) ABIGAIL—Sometimes used for female servants.See also Betty. ACCOMPT—An old spelling …
[PDF File]Personal Names in 18th-Century Scotland: a case study of ...
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Personal Names in 18th-Century Scotland 5 The Journal of Scottish Name Studies 6, 2012, 1–10 England. In an earlier study of the parish of Castle Camps in Cambridgeshire (Crook, forthcoming), I discovered that an average of 61% of families with a male child had a case of potential patrilineal naming and an average of 46.2%
[PDF File]Marriage in Seventeenth-Century England: The Woman’s Story
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The seventeenth century represents a fascinating period of English history, drawing the attention of whole generations of historians. This turbulent age saw three major events that had a deep impact on England’ s political as well as social life—the English Revolution, the Restoration of the Stuarts in 1660 and the Glorious Revolution in 1688.
[PDF File]Interpreting the Symbols and Abbreviations in Seventeenth ...
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Until the late 18 century, there were no hard rules concerning the spelling of words, place-names, or surnames. Words were written phonetically, as a series of sounds, often influenced by dialect. It is not unusual to find words, including surnames, spelled in several different ways on the same page. Common words may appear anywhere in
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