One of the other changes in the dictionary entries that
users might notice, aside from the new usage tags and the addition of references
to cognate words in other dictionaries, involves the content of the entries. The
addition that is likely to interest a wide variety of users is that we are beginning
to note the use of certain terms as surnames, where we have attestations of such
a use.
(Bede roll of the Guild of the Blessed Virgin Mary (1349-50), Parker Library)
The inclusion of surnames in dictionaries is not without
difficulties. As we mentioned earlier this year in our discussion of the words pastry/pie, often the language of surnames
is problematic: names frequently occur in lists which may follow a bilingual or
trilingual text.
How then to determine the language of the name? In general, we try to err on the side of inclusion, as frequently surnames attest to Anglo-Norman (as well as Middle English and Latin) words far earlier than they appear in literary or administrative use. It is the use of either the Anglo-Norman definite article ‘le/la’ or the Anglo-Norman spelling of the word that helps us determine whether a given word may be considered Anglo-Norman (though neither element is of itself an indicator of ‘Anglo-Normanness’, cf. Richard Ingham, The Anglo-Norman Language and its Context (2010), p. 136).
How then to determine the language of the name? In general, we try to err on the side of inclusion, as frequently surnames attest to Anglo-Norman (as well as Middle English and Latin) words far earlier than they appear in literary or administrative use. It is the use of either the Anglo-Norman definite article ‘le/la’ or the Anglo-Norman spelling of the word that helps us determine whether a given word may be considered Anglo-Norman (though neither element is of itself an indicator of ‘Anglo-Normanness’, cf. Richard Ingham, The Anglo-Norman Language and its Context (2010), p. 136).
As you may be aware, a number of British surnames
ultimately derive from medieval occupation names: Fisher, Smith, Potter etc.
are all names which originated as occupations and the adopted as monikers to
distinguish individuals.[1] It
can be a challenge in a medieval context to determine if certain terms are functioning merely as a proper
name, or if they still indicate that person’s occupation. There are several
entries in the section of P- currently under revision that will include surnames
– let’s look at some of our attestations from the occupational entries.
Ceaux sount les ordeignances et constitucions
novelment faitz en
l’artificees des tannours gaunters et parchemyners d’Everwyk
par assent de touz les meistres
des artificees
(YMB i 81)
('These are the ordinances and the constitutions
newly made in the guilds of the tanners, glovemakers and parchmenters of York
by the agreement of all the masters of these guilds')
We also have two examples of the term being used as a surname in John of Gaunt’s registers, circa 1372-1383:
noz amez tenantz Johan Albon, Gamelyn Impheye, et Wauter Parchemyner de Chesthont
(Gaunt1 i 168)
Johan Parchemener de Leycestre
(Gaunt2 i 30)
touz les forestiers, parkers, guarrenners,
palisers, bondgardes de nostre forest
(Gaunt1 ii 330)
('all of the foresters, parkers, warreners,
palisers, boundary keepers of our forest')
We have found no attestations of this occupation as
a surname in our A-N source material, however, the OED (sub paliser n.; MED paliser n. provides additional
examples) notes two uses of the word as surname in 1315 and again in 1414 in
the forms Paleser and Palaser. As the word is clearly
Anglo-Norman, derived from the Latin paliciarius
(DMLBS 2085c), these citations will be incorporated into our entry as further (and earlier) evidence of the existence of the word in Anglo-Norman.
(Codex s.n. 2644 Oesterreichische Nationalbibliothek, Vienna, Austria)
As seen above, parker as an occupation, is well attested in Anglo-Norman, perhaps as a reflection of the importance of the position and of the parks to medieval British life. The term is mostly found in various legal and administrative texts, but also turns up in Seintz Medecines, an allegorical text of the mid-fourteenth century, as well as in Walter of Henley’s treatise on farming:
en trois gyses sont acoustomés ceaux veneours et
les parkeres ou foresters a destruire cele male court de renars
(Sz Med 104.14)
('These hunters
and parker or foresters are accustomed to destroy the fox’s earth in three
ways')
si le seygnur y met parker
ou messer ou graunger [...]
(Henley 440.c56)
('if the lord places there a parker or steward or
granger [...]')
The earliest use of Parker as a surname is found in
1199 in the Rotuli Curiae Regis (i,282)
where the name Willielmus Parker can
be found. We have also found a Johan
Parker (Gaunt1 i 33), a Robert le
Parker (Lett EPW 56) and a Huschon
Parker (Port Bks 58).
These surnames once again provide early attestations of the
use of the term, although their language remains difficult to ascertain.
A paneter was the official in charge of the pantry, known in English as the ‘pantry-man’ or the ‘panter’. Like parker, we have numerous citations attesting to its use, from the end of the thirteenth century:
qe nule liveree ne face le paneter
(Westm 244)
('that the panter make no deliveries')
The MED (sub paneter(e n.) provides a lengthy
list of examples of ‘le Paneter’ in various spellings used as a surname,
beginning in the early thirteenth century. We have equally found a use of the
name without the definite article in the records of the Goldsmiths:
[...] de Johan Panter pur un defaute en fesaunce d’esquilers - ij
s.
(Goldsmiths 226)
('[...] of John Panter, for a fault in the
making of spoons, fined 2 shillings')
Pe(s)tour
Finally, we come to poor Mr. Petour, i.e. ‘Mr. Farter’. Two citations from the DMLBS were included in our entry for petour which implied that Roland was so named due to his memorable intestinal distress. However, in rewriting P-, it has been determined that his name was likely a variant of the word pestur, that is, Mr. Baker! We apologize sincerely to any of Roland’s descendants.
(Book of hours, KB 76.F.14, fol. 14r)
While we don’t currently have a semantic tag specifically
for surnames, in the future, users should be able to find such information by either
using the ‘occupation’ tag (a new semantic tag which we are currently in the process of adding), or for names that do not fall under that category, by
searching ‘surname’ in the translation search available from our main page.
Those who are interested in medieval names may also be
interested in having a look at the Dictionary of Medieval Names from European Sources:
www.dmnes.org (which concentrates mainly on first names), as well as FaNUK, an ongoing project that gathers 45,000 Family Names of the United Kingdom and investigates their elinguistic origins and geogroaphocal distribution (FaNUK).
[hap]
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