Nordic Names: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
m (Text replacement - "Personal Names" to "Naming Customs") |
||
(27 intermediate revisions by 9 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
== | {{Scandinavia-sidebar}} | ||
{{breadcrumb | |||
| link1=[[Nordic Countries]] | |||
| link2= | |||
| link3= | |||
| link4= | |||
| link5=[[Nordic Names|Names]] | |||
}} | |||
The patronymic naming system was used in all of Scandinavia. That means a | == Patronymic Naming System == | ||
The patronymic naming system was used in all of Scandinavia. That means a person's family name was formed by taking the first name of the natural father and adding a suffix identifying their gender to it. This allows you to identify a person's father. This was you could know a man named Johannes Augustsen was the son of August, and Maria Pedersdatter was the daughter of Peder. Because of this system, there could be many people living in the same place at the same time with the same surnames who were completely unrelated. Because of this knowing where a person was born or where they were living becomes very important to establish correct identity. | |||
For most of us the patromymic naming system is different from what we're used to. However, it was the best system for the time and the culture, since just a few names, among them Jens, Lars, Peder, Ole, Anders, and their derivations, were used 90 percent of the time. With the patronymic system, at least the first name of the previous generation was known. | For most of us, the patromymic naming system is different from what we're used to. However, it was the best system for the time and the culture, since just a few names, among them Jens, Lars, Peder, Ole, Anders, and their derivations, were used 90 percent of the time. With the patronymic system, at least the first name of the previous generation was known. Historically, Danish and Norwegian patronymic surnames often ended with the suffix -''sen'' for males and -''datter'' for females, while Swedish patronymic surnames were more likely to end with -''sson'' for males and -''dotter'' for females. | ||
Scandinavian females did not assume | Scandinavian females did not assume their husband's surname when they married. They carried their maiden surname throughout their life. Record keepers recorded what their ears heard, and spelled what they heard the way they thought it should be spelled. You have to think phonetically when doing any kind of search in any country's records. | ||
For more information about the practice in a specific country see [[Denmark Naming Customs]], [[Finland Naming Customs]], [[Iceland Naming Customs]], [[Norway Naming Customs]], or [[Sweden Naming Customs]]. For more information about given names, see the [[Scandinavian Given Names]]. | |||
[[Category:Nordic Countries]] | |||
[[Category:Naming Customs]] | |||
[[Category: |
Latest revision as of 16:50, 12 December 2023
Nordic Wiki Topics | |
Countries | |
Articles | |
Patronymic Naming System
The patronymic naming system was used in all of Scandinavia. That means a person's family name was formed by taking the first name of the natural father and adding a suffix identifying their gender to it. This allows you to identify a person's father. This was you could know a man named Johannes Augustsen was the son of August, and Maria Pedersdatter was the daughter of Peder. Because of this system, there could be many people living in the same place at the same time with the same surnames who were completely unrelated. Because of this knowing where a person was born or where they were living becomes very important to establish correct identity.
For most of us, the patromymic naming system is different from what we're used to. However, it was the best system for the time and the culture, since just a few names, among them Jens, Lars, Peder, Ole, Anders, and their derivations, were used 90 percent of the time. With the patronymic system, at least the first name of the previous generation was known. Historically, Danish and Norwegian patronymic surnames often ended with the suffix -sen for males and -datter for females, while Swedish patronymic surnames were more likely to end with -sson for males and -dotter for females.
Scandinavian females did not assume their husband's surname when they married. They carried their maiden surname throughout their life. Record keepers recorded what their ears heard, and spelled what they heard the way they thought it should be spelled. You have to think phonetically when doing any kind of search in any country's records.
For more information about the practice in a specific country see Denmark Naming Customs, Finland Naming Customs, Iceland Naming Customs, Norway Naming Customs, or Sweden Naming Customs. For more information about given names, see the Scandinavian Given Names.