Difference between revisions of "Why did surnames emerge"
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==Recent Developments== | ==Recent Developments== | ||
− | Slowly throughout the late Medieval period more families began to use fixed surnames. In Europe, people were still commonly referred to by their occupation (e.g., Butchers, Carpenters, etc.), but those designations began to be fixed as lower classes began to imitate the upper classes, even though they may have not held any significant land holdings. In some parts of Spain, people would use a patronymic system, where it would take the name of the father as the surname, but in the Medieval and late Medieval period those names began to become more fixed. By the 1400s, many people began to have fixed surnames. In England, Henry VIII in the 16th century ordered that children take a fixed surname from their fathers. This allowed people to be more easily recorded and this may have helped further establish the system of a fixed surname. | + | Slowly throughout the late Medieval period more families began to use fixed surnames. In Europe, people were still commonly referred to by their occupation (e.g., Butchers, Carpenters, etc.), but those designations began to be fixed as lower classes began to imitate the upper classes, even though they may have not held any significant land holdings. In some parts of Spain, people would use a patronymic system, where it would take the name of the father as the surname, but in the Medieval and late Medieval period those names began to become more fixed. By the 1400s, many people began to have fixed surnames. In England, Henry VIII in the 16th century ordered that children take a fixed surname from their fathers. This allowed people to be more easily recorded and this may have helped further establish the system of a fixed surname. Recent studies have shown that most surnames that derive from Europe has four different types of origin. They are either place-based (place of origin), occupation name (i.e., a likely trade conducted by past members of the family), derived from their fathers' name (often first name), or simply a nickname given to someone at some point that stayed in the family. Surnames are a combination of a single place origin, that is the surname was derived at one place and one time, while other surnames are combinations of different events and circumstances. For instance, having a surname that combines an occupation and nickname. |
− | It was mostly after 1600, as European powers expanded or increased their influence, surnames became globally prevalent. It became easier for rulers and administrators to designating people with fixed surnames, as this facilitated records in keeping track of people. Japan, Thailand, and Turkey are examples of countries that changed their normal family name systems to adopt fixed surnames due to Western influence. | + | It was mostly after 1600, as European powers expanded or increased their influence, surnames became globally prevalent. It became easier for rulers and administrators to designating people with fixed surnames, as this facilitated records in keeping track of people. Japan, Thailand, and Turkey are examples of countries that changed their normal family name systems to adopt fixed surnames due to Western influence. |
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+ | Since the early Medieval period, women often adopted designations, or whatever was used as a surname, from their husbands. This practice carried over as more people began to adopt fixed surnames. It was only in more recent periods in the 20th century that women began to forgo adopting their husbands' last names. In 1979, part of the UN declaration for womens' equality called for the end of the practice of forcing women to adopt their husbands' surnames. | ||
==Social Significance== | ==Social Significance== |
Revision as of 08:19, 6 September 2018
First names have likely existed since possibly soon after humans evolved into their modern forms. However, the origin and development of surnames (or last names) is far less known and is likely a more recent phenomenon. People were often designated by their larger kinship groups, often through a male line but sometimes female, as part of their identification in more ancient periods. Distinguishing by a specific surname for a person though is still not universal throughout the world, although it is now very common.
Origin of Surnames
Surnames, of sorts, are known from ancient periods. However, these surnames often had to do with clan names or names of places used as a way to distinguish a person. For instance, in ancient Greece, it would be common to refer to a person from an ancient city. Another way people were distinguished, which is still used such as in tribal groups in the Middle East today, is to refer to the name of the father for the son or daughter as the person's second name. Someone would be referred to as the son or daughter of someone, where the father's first name would then be used as something akin to a surname. In the Roman Empire, family names were sometimes used, but often this had links to clans or if other systems were used family names would often drop or not be carried from generation to generation. Ancient China may have one of the oldest traditions in using a type of surname. It seems a matrilineal and later a patrilineal system emerged where the child would take on a fixed surname that would designate the person's lineage. However, it is possible these names could have changed after multiple generations.
Early surnames were generally not fixed and this meant that after one or two generations, it was common to lose links with someone's more distant past. The first recorded surname where that surname appears to be fixed appears in the 10th century in Ireland, where the surname Ó Cleirigh could be the oldest continuous surname. However, centuries later surnames were still uncommon in most of Europe and if surnames were used it was usually in reference to an occupation or sometimes in reference to someone's father. In effect, these surnames did not continue beyond a few generations. Surnames may have begun to become more established in the West during and after the Norman conquest. At around the 11th century, the Norman nobility began adopting surnames the denoted location of origin or land in which they held. This allowed them to make claims to land and it was common to use the French 'de' (of) in connotation to a place or land. This then became a way the noble classes could distinguish themselves from others and it also allowed them to use this second name as a way to pass that name to their kin so that land could be inherited. It effectively became a status symbol to have a fixed surname so that there was no ambiguity of the person's status. This was similar to how French feudal land owners also used designations such as 'de' to identify their land ownership.
Recent Developments
Slowly throughout the late Medieval period more families began to use fixed surnames. In Europe, people were still commonly referred to by their occupation (e.g., Butchers, Carpenters, etc.), but those designations began to be fixed as lower classes began to imitate the upper classes, even though they may have not held any significant land holdings. In some parts of Spain, people would use a patronymic system, where it would take the name of the father as the surname, but in the Medieval and late Medieval period those names began to become more fixed. By the 1400s, many people began to have fixed surnames. In England, Henry VIII in the 16th century ordered that children take a fixed surname from their fathers. This allowed people to be more easily recorded and this may have helped further establish the system of a fixed surname. Recent studies have shown that most surnames that derive from Europe has four different types of origin. They are either place-based (place of origin), occupation name (i.e., a likely trade conducted by past members of the family), derived from their fathers' name (often first name), or simply a nickname given to someone at some point that stayed in the family. Surnames are a combination of a single place origin, that is the surname was derived at one place and one time, while other surnames are combinations of different events and circumstances. For instance, having a surname that combines an occupation and nickname.
It was mostly after 1600, as European powers expanded or increased their influence, surnames became globally prevalent. It became easier for rulers and administrators to designating people with fixed surnames, as this facilitated records in keeping track of people. Japan, Thailand, and Turkey are examples of countries that changed their normal family name systems to adopt fixed surnames due to Western influence.
Since the early Medieval period, women often adopted designations, or whatever was used as a surname, from their husbands. This practice carried over as more people began to adopt fixed surnames. It was only in more recent periods in the 20th century that women began to forgo adopting their husbands' last names. In 1979, part of the UN declaration for womens' equality called for the end of the practice of forcing women to adopt their husbands' surnames.