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Names taken from family history

25 replies

nomorecrumbs · 18/10/2013 19:39

I'm a lot bit crackers about family history and would love to take a name from my tree that is a bit more unusual.

I have to go very far back to find names other than the Margarets and Elizabeths, and around the 1100s I found 'Adeline' which I rather like - it sounds quite elegant IMO - but I'm not sure whether it's "add-a-line" (which I'd prefer) or "add-a-leen".

What d'you lot reckon? :)

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meditrina · 18/10/2013 19:45

I read it as Add-a-line

I've never heard it said out loud.

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Frontdoorstep · 18/10/2013 19:51

You pronounce it add- a- line, it's unusual, I like it, and if it haas family connections for you, even better, it would be a very good choice.

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Frikadellen · 18/10/2013 19:52

Pretty and yes Add a line

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RoadToTuapeka · 18/10/2013 19:58

I would pronounce it as Ad - a - line, is a very pretty name!

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HorryIsUpduffed · 18/10/2013 20:06

1100s though? Holy crap that's some serious genealogy!

Add-a-line, yes. Very cool.

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HollyBen · 18/10/2013 20:13

Love it!

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QOD · 18/10/2013 20:21

Oh I like!

Add a line

Like from Bread! Or was that Av a line?

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Offcolour · 18/10/2013 20:27

Lovely

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mysterymeg · 18/10/2013 20:30

I had a friend at school who was Adeline pronounced add - a - leen but she was French if that makes a difference?

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meditrina · 18/10/2013 20:32

The Bread character was Aveline.

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nomorecrumbs · 18/10/2013 20:36

It does have French roots Grin the poshest Adeline I found was "Adeline de Beauchamp" so yeah. Another for the list!

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SconeRhymesWithGone · 18/10/2013 20:45

There's a song:

Sweet Adeline

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Bowlersarm · 18/10/2013 20:46

I thought 'Bread' as well. Similar name. I think it's clumsy.

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squoosh · 18/10/2013 21:00

Adeline doesn't sound very 12th century!

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nomorecrumbs · 18/10/2013 21:52
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nomorecrumbs · 18/10/2013 21:52
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squoosh · 18/10/2013 21:59

Well you must come from posh stock, I'll bet my 12th century relatives had names like Grubb and Lump.

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nomorecrumbs · 18/10/2013 22:04

I wish mine were normal early on! We all have aristocratic ancestors - it's just sometimes almost impossible to trace them. I'm lucky because all my direct lines from the 1600s onwards is from one small town, so surnames are easy to trace, even though they lost their riches by then! It's sickening to see all these ruined castles that used to be my great x n grandfather's property... I should drop the National Trust a line...

All the lines I've traced were aristocratic before the 1600s (before official records of the whole population started) so it's easy to trace back to Norman times.

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nomorecrumbs · 18/10/2013 22:07

And since I've traced my direct line back to approx. 300 great x 24 grandfathers, I bet nearly everyone on Mumsnet is directly related to these same aristocrats, as they would have had tens of thousands of descendants.

My family tree has over 10000 people in it so far Blush

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HorryIsUpduffed · 18/10/2013 22:26

Crikey. I got bored doing mine so DH took over. He said it got much easier once they turned up on Wikipedia and he could just keep clicking Grin

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nomorecrumbs · 18/10/2013 22:34

I blame the English Civil War. I think my Northern aristocrats ended up supporting the wrong side (Royalists) so got a lot of their land taken from them. It would explain why my direct ancestors suddenly stop turning up in "Castle X" or "Manor Y" and instead end up marrying people with normal names...no more Sirs or Ladies after the 1600s :(

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ZombieMonkeyButler · 18/10/2013 22:43

Wow, how posh! If your ancestors owned castles mine would have been their servants more than likely!

I can't believe you've had to go back 800 years to find a usable name though - were they all Margarets and Elizabeths?

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marriedinwhiteisback · 18/10/2013 22:43

So Adeline de Beachamp is likely to have French roots then. Anything to do with Beauchamp Place (Beecham Place) in Knightsbridge OP?

Lovely name by the way.

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nomorecrumbs · 18/10/2013 22:53

There's a fair few Alice's, which normally I'd love, but DP's ex and an ex's ex is called Alice so the name is ruined for me :P

There are 283 Margarets in my family. Over 300 Elizabeths. It's quite common, yeah Grin Northern inbred aristocrats were a conventional bunch.

Beauchamp Place has its roots in the Seymour family en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beauchamp_Place and I haven't traced my ancestors back through that line yet - I don't think I'm directly related, that's getting close to royal links and I've only found cousins around that way!

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GampyWabbit · 19/10/2013 15:34

There is an Adeline (Addie) in ds' class. Lovely name.

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