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Allicock
Surname History
Recorded in a wide number of
spellings including Allicock, Alycock, Elcoate, Ellacott, Ellicock,
Elcot, Ellicot, Ellicott, and others, this interesting surname is
of Medieval English origin. Although many spellings are now to be
found with the suffix ending of 'cock,' there seems to be little
doube that 'cott' was the original form. It is locational from
either of two places now called Elcot in the counties of Berkshire
and Wiltshire. The derivation is from the Old English pre 7th
Century personal name "Ella", with cott, meaning a shelter or
cottage. It is first recorded in the year 1237 in Wiltshire, and as
Ellecote in the charter rolls of Berkshire in 1286. During the
Middle Ages when it became more common for people to migrate from
their birthplace, they would often adopt the placename as a means
of identification. As spelling was at best indifferent before
Victorian times, and local dialects very thick, surnames were often
recorded in many varied forms, some as with this one, far removed
from the original. The early surviving church registers of the city
of London include recordings such as the marriage of Elizabethe
Elacot to John Wealler at St Brides, Fleet Street, on February 28th
1587, Hellen Ellacett who married to Richard Wodkeeper (!) at St
Botolphs, Bishopgate, on September 16th 1622, and the christening
of Margaret Ellicock on January 25th 1761 at St. Botolph's Without
Aldgate. Surnames became necessary when governments introduced
personal taxation. In England this sometimes was known as the Poll
Tax. Throughout the centuries, surnames in every country have
continued to "develop" often leading to astonishing variants of the
original spelling.