There's this.linguoboy wrote:I've heard this for years now but I've had the damnedest time sourcing it. Do you have any supporting cites, Hans-Werner?hwhatting wrote:Often, such names weren't chosen by the Jews in question, but foisted on them by the bureaucrats tasked with registering the surnames, who tended to indulge in what they thought of as humour. IIRC, there were cases of Jews being given unpleasant names which would be changed to something more pleasant for a bribe.
Colours as surnames
Re: Colours as surnames
Re: Colours as surnames
A mention in a Wikipedia article is not a citation. Their source seems to be personal communication with a certain Gershom Martin, who I wouldn't know from Golda Meir. He likewise provides no cites for his examples, so what is the factual basis for his claim? We don't know.Neptuno wrote:There's this.linguoboy wrote:I've heard this for years now but I've had the damnedest time sourcing it. Do you have any supporting cites, Hans-Werner?hwhatting wrote:Often, such names weren't chosen by the Jews in question, but foisted on them by the bureaucrats tasked with registering the surnames, who tended to indulge in what they thought of as humour. IIRC, there were cases of Jews being given unpleasant names which would be changed to something more pleasant for a bribe.
Re: Colours as surnames
TONS of these names exist. Krankheit (Cronkite) means sickness, Kotter is from Kot "mud/feces", Goldwater is sometimes said to be a euphemism for urine. (Even the sadistic surname registrars wouldnt actually go so far as to give someone a name like "Piss", etc)hwhatting wrote:I remember reading about that in the dtv-Atlas Namenkunde, but that's on my shelf in Bonn.linguoboy wrote:I've heard this for years now but I've had the damnedest time sourcing it. Do you have any supporting cites, Hans-Werner?hwhatting wrote:Often, such names weren't chosen by the Jews in question, but foisted on them by the bureaucrats tasked with registering the surnames, who tended to indulge in what they thought of as humour. IIRC, there were cases of Jews being given unpleasant names which would be changed to something more pleasant for a bribe.
A quick search leads me to this PDF, which quotes the dtv-Atlas. According to this, such cases seem to be attested only for Western Galicia:So that wasn't as frequent as I remembered.Es ist verbreitete Ansicht, daß bei der Durchführung solcher Erlasse den Juden für Bestechungsgeld ,schöne‘ Namen wie Blumenberg, sonst aber scheußliche wie Stiefelknecht
gegeben wurden (Ekelnamen).
Entsprechende Vorkommnisse gab es in Westgalizien, wo die Juden 1805 ihre Familiennamen vom Kreisamt oder einem Commissär ,zu empfangen‘ hatten. Sie wurden aber oft zu Unrecht
verallgemeinert und sind andernorts nicht nachweisbar.
edit: well, ancestry.com says Kotter is just a coincidence, and English has names like Mudd, etc, so I guess that's not that much of a pattern (though Im sure there's other names I cant remember)
Sunàqʷa the Sea Lamprey says:

Re: Colours as surnames
If they're so very common, then it shouldn't be hard to find proper evidence for accounts of their assignment, should it?Soap wrote:TONS of these names exist. Krankheit (Cronkite) means sickness, Kotter is from Kot "mud/feces", Goldwater is sometimes said to be a euphemism for urine. (Even the sadistic surname registrars wouldnt actually go so far as to give someone a name like "Piss", etc)
Your story about "Goldwater" is quite clever, but implausible given the actual meaning of "Goldwasser" in German. Moreover, it wouldn't be the first name I've seen ascribed to "sadistic registrars" when a quite innocuous and better-supported etymology exists. "Kussmaul" is a good example.
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Re: Colours as surnames
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Re: Colours as surnames
I have no idea if it works its way into surnames but besides silversmiths and goldsmiths there are brownsmiths (bronze), whitesmiths (tin), and blacksmiths. I've always assumed last names like Silver, Golds, Brown, White, and Black came from those professions but I never looked for confirmation. The explanations other gave make as much sense.
Re: Colours as surnames
I can't think of any in Swedish or Finnish, but in Finnish there's a given name, Sini, though. Sininen means blue.
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Re: Colours as surnames
So it's only half blue? Something like "bl...."Qwynegold wrote:I can't think of any in Swedish or Finnish, but in Finnish there's a given name, Sini, though. Sininen means blue.
But no, I have to agree with you. Apart from a Norwegian friend of mine called Scarlet, I don't believe I have ever heard a color-derived name anywhere in Scandinavia.
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Re: Colours as surnames
I tried searching a Swedish surname site and found several hits for "Hvit" and "Blå", all of them confined to Västergötland. "Gul" was attested both there and in Stockholm, whereas "Guld" only in Jönköping and "Röd" only in Södermanland. "Svart", "Silver", "Brun", and "Grön" were more widely dispersed. "Grå" was so rare no places of origin were given.Peacekeeper wrote:But no, I have to agree with you. Apart from a Norwegian friend of mine called Scarlet, I don't believe I have ever heard a color-derived name anywhere in Scandinavia.
According to the assigned rankings, none of these makes it into the top 1000, so I'm not surprised no one's come across them before. The most popular was Brun at #1222. In every case but that of Grön, the corresponding German version of the name (e.g. Braun, Gold, Schwar(t)z, Weiss, etc.) was more popular. Of course, Grön could also be a rounded variant of Gren (#350) "branch", couldn't it?
Re: Colours as surnames
So, FWIW, Germany according to Geogen (I tried to take into account as many possible alternate spellings and variants I could think of; if there were just 2 or 3 people I omitted those variants)
Red (total: 26,885)
Rot: 113
Roth: 26,114
Rodt: 24
Roht: 20
Rohd: 11
Rood: 28
Root: 575
Yellow
Gelb: 65
Blue (total: 1,193)
Blau: 1,185
Blauw: 8
Green (total: 3,618)
Grün: 3385
Gruen: 47
Grühn: 182
Gruehn: 4
Brown (total: 44.423)
Braun: 43,511
Brauns: 912
Black (total: 57,147)
Schwarz: 45,495
Schwartz: 3,424
Schwarze: 4,034
Schwartze: 285
Schwarzer: 3,879
Schwartzer: 30
White (total: 42,346)
Weiß: 30,113
Weiss: 8,431
Waiß: 43
Waiss: 11
Weiße: 1,110
Weisse: 193
Weißer: 1,129
Weisser: 1,316
Gray (total: 4,970)
Grau: 3,826
Graue: 279
Grauer: 865
Gold (total: 3,819)
Gold: 1,466
Goldt: 71
Golde: 318
Goldner: 196
Goldschmied: 13
Goldschmidt: 1,625
Goldschmitt: 130
Silver (total: 527)
Silber: 450
Silberer: 73
Silberschmidt: 4
Blonde
Blond: 16
Red (total: 26,885)
Rot: 113
Roth: 26,114
Rodt: 24
Roht: 20
Rohd: 11
Rood: 28
Root: 575
Yellow
Gelb: 65
Blue (total: 1,193)
Blau: 1,185
Blauw: 8
Green (total: 3,618)
Grün: 3385
Gruen: 47
Grühn: 182
Gruehn: 4
Brown (total: 44.423)
Braun: 43,511
Brauns: 912
Black (total: 57,147)
Schwarz: 45,495
Schwartz: 3,424
Schwarze: 4,034
Schwartze: 285
Schwarzer: 3,879
Schwartzer: 30
White (total: 42,346)
Weiß: 30,113
Weiss: 8,431
Waiß: 43
Waiss: 11
Weiße: 1,110
Weisse: 193
Weißer: 1,129
Weisser: 1,316
Gray (total: 4,970)
Grau: 3,826
Graue: 279
Grauer: 865
Gold (total: 3,819)
Gold: 1,466
Goldt: 71
Golde: 318
Goldner: 196
Goldschmied: 13
Goldschmidt: 1,625
Goldschmitt: 130
Silver (total: 527)
Silber: 450
Silberer: 73
Silberschmidt: 4
Blonde
Blond: 16
Re: Colours as surnames
It just occurred to me that some or all of those "Rød"/"Røed" names in Norway could actually be from Old Norse ruð "clearing". There are some Norwegian place names ending in -rød, and I'm pretty sure they're not named after the color. There are also many place names (and therefore surnames) ending in -rud, and "Rud"/"Ruud" itself is a reasonably common name (about 5000 people).
Re: Colours as surnames
Yeah, roden means 'to clear woodland' in German (as a noun, Rodung), so that's potentially ambiguous, too. Also, Waise means 'orphan', but it has a voiced [z], not [s] like weiß.
Re: Colours as surnames
I looked it up at SCB and Swedish stand-alone color names are all very rare (410 people are named "Brun", which indeed seems like the most common one, only 9 are named "Blå"). "Grön" is considerably more widespread as part of a compound. "Grönlund" alone reaches a staggering 2136 hits.linguoboy wrote:I tried searching a Swedish surname site and found several hits for "Hvit" and "Blå", all of them confined to Västergötland. "Gul" was attested both there and in Stockholm, whereas "Guld" only in Jönköping and "Röd" only in Södermanland. "Svart", "Silver", "Brun", and "Grön" were more widely dispersed. "Grå" was so rare no places of origin were given.Peacekeeper wrote:But no, I have to agree with you. Apart from a Norwegian friend of mine called Scarlet, I don't believe I have ever heard a color-derived name anywhere in Scandinavia.
According to the assigned rankings, none of these makes it into the top 1000, so I'm not surprised no one's come across them before. The most popular was Brun at #1222. In every case but that of Grön, the corresponding German version of the name (e.g. Braun, Gold, Schwar(t)z, Weiss, etc.) was more popular. Of course, Grön could also be a rounded variant of Gren (#350) "branch", couldn't it?
Re: Colours as surnames
Interesting site (there's 10 people with my name)! Hmm, Gul might not necessarily be a Swedish name.linguoboy wrote:I tried searching a Swedish surname site and found several hits for "Hvit" and "Blå", all of them confined to Västergötland. "Gul" was attested both there and in Stockholm, whereas "Guld" only in Jönköping and "Röd" only in Södermanland. "Svart", "Silver", "Brun", and "Grön" were more widely dispersed. "Grå" was so rare no places of origin were given.Peacekeeper wrote:But no, I have to agree with you. Apart from a Norwegian friend of mine called Scarlet, I don't believe I have ever heard a color-derived name anywhere in Scandinavia.
Yeah, all of them had only a dozen bearers except of Grön/Gröön, Brun/Bruun, Svart/Swart and Silver/Silfver.linguoboy wrote:According to the assigned rankings, none of these makes it into the top 1000, so I'm not surprised no one's come across them before. The most popular was Brun at #1222. In every case but that of Grön, the corresponding German version of the name (e.g. Braun, Gold, Schwar(t)z, Weiss, etc.) was more popular.
I don't know anything about Swedish diachronics, but why would it be rounded?linguoboy wrote:Of course, Grön could also be a rounded variant of Gren (#350) "branch", couldn't it?
Re: Colours as surnames
I'm simply assuming that Swedish would show the same sort of variation that German does in these circumstances.Qwynegold wrote:I don't know anything about Swedish diachronics, but why would it be rounded?linguoboy wrote:Of course, Grön could also be a rounded variant of Gren (#350) "branch", couldn't it?
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Re: Colours as surnames
Hmm, I'm not really aware of randomly rounding dialects. There's a lot of derounding, yes, but the only rounding shift I can think of is l-vocalisation, but I'm not really aware of that having had an effect on surnames.linguoboy wrote:I'm simply assuming that Swedish would show the same sort of variation that German does in these circumstances.Qwynegold wrote:I don't know anything about Swedish diachronics, but why would it be rounded?linguoboy wrote:Of course, Grön could also be a rounded variant of Gren (#350) "branch", couldn't it?
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Re: Colours as surnames
Probably not a variant, but a cognate.Qwynegold wrote:I don't know anything about Swedish diachronics, but why would it be rounded?linguoboy wrote:Of course, Grön could also be a rounded variant of Gren (#350) "branch", couldn't it?
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Re: Colours as surnames
No yellow indeed in French. Though Leblond is common..
In Japanese, you have many, including the famous 紫 murasaki, purple. Many names will also include color names. This comes from the fact most Japanese names are locational, and many places in Japan include a color name.
In Japanese, you have many, including the famous 紫 murasaki, purple. Many names will also include color names. This comes from the fact most Japanese names are locational, and many places in Japan include a color name.
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Re: Colours as surnames
Locational or ornamental? Like the Scandinavians and the European Jews, most Japanese adopted surnames relatively recently and my impression was that they showed a similar preference for pleasant-sounding combinations that weren't associated with any particularly toponym. Is there really a Black Swamp someplace where Kurosawa's ancestors originated?Yiuel Raumbesrairc wrote:In Japanese, you have many, including the famous 紫 murasaki, purple. Many names will also include color names. This comes from the fact most Japanese names are locational, and many places in Japan include a color name.
Re: Colours as surnames
But Murasaki was merely an epithet and not a real name.Yiuel Raumbesrairc wrote:No yellow indeed in French. Though Leblond is common..
In Japanese, you have many, including the famous 紫 murasaki, purple. Many names will also include color names. This comes from the fact most Japanese names are locational, and many places in Japan include a color name.
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Re: Colours as surnames
There is a rice paddy that Tanaka's ancestors came from, at least.Is there really a Black Swamp someplace where Kurosawa's ancestors originated?
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Re: Colours as surnames
There seem to be 183 113 people with my last name. Which confirms my impression that it's far far too common. I need to come up with a new one.Qwynegold wrote:Interesting site (there's 10 people with my name)!linguoboy wrote:I tried searching a Swedish surname site
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Re: Colours as surnames
So what's your favourite colour?Peacekeeper wrote:There seem to be 183 113 people with my last name. Which confirms my impression that it's far far too common. I need to come up with a new one.Qwynegold wrote:Interesting site (there's 10 people with my name)!linguoboy wrote:I tried searching a Swedish surname site
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Re: Colours as surnames
Some kind of bluish green, I think. Or dark purple. Mixed in with gold. Very nice combo, that, gold and purple.linguoboy wrote:So what's your favourite colour?Peacekeeper wrote:There seem to be 183 113 people with my last name. Which confirms my impression that it's far far too common. I need to come up with a new one.Qwynegold wrote:Interesting site (there's 10 people with my name)!linguoboy wrote:I tried searching a Swedish surname site
So what kind of name could we make with these? Blugroldurple, perhaps?
Last edited by Peacekeeper on Thu Aug 11, 2011 5:41 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Colours as surnames
Slovene has Belec, which might be from bel "white". Rus is also a common surname, but its original meaning may be "Russian" rather than "red-brown" (these are homonyms). There may also be some derivatives from zelen "green", such as Zelenec or Zelenko, and plav "blue/blonde", such as Plavec. Rozman is a common one, but I highly doubt it's related to roza "pink" in any meaningful way.
So no, there are not all that many, actually.
So no, there are not all that many, actually.
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