From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
German family names were introduced during the
late Middle Ages in
the German
language area. Usually, such family names are derived from nicknames. In etymology, they are generally classified
into four groups, based on the origin of a nickname: given names, job designations, bodily
attributes, and geographical references (including references
to named buildings). Also, many family names display characteristic
features of the dialect of
the region they originated in.
- Given names often turned into family names
when people were identified by their father's name. For example, the
first name Ahrend developed into the family name
Ahrends by adding a genitive s-ending, as in Ahrend's
son.
Examples: Ahrends/Ahrens, Burkhard, Wulff,
Friedrich, Benz, Friz. With many of the early city records
written in Latin, occasionally
the Latin genitive plural -i was used such as in Jakobi or
Alberti or (written as -'y') in Mendelssohn Bartholdy
- Job designations are the most common form of
family names; anybody who had an unusual job would have been bound
to be identified by it. Examples: Schmidt (smith), Müller (miller), Meier (farm
administrator; akin to Mayor),
Schulze (constable), Fischer (fisherman), Schneider (tailor), Maurer (mason), Bauer (farmer), Metzger or Fleischer (butcher), Töpfer, Toepfer (potter) or Klingemann (weapons smith). Also,
names referring to nobility such as Kaiser (emperor), König (king), Graf (count) are common, with the name
bearers probably only a minor functionary of a monarch.
- Bodily attribute names are family names such
as Krause (curly),
Schwarzkopf
(black head), Klein (small), Groß
(tall).
- Geographical names are derived from the name
of a city or village, or the location of someone's home. They often
have the '-er' postfix that signifies origin (as in English New
Yorker). Examples: Kissinger (from Kissingen), Schwarzenegger (from Schwarzenegg
[1] or
Schwarzeneck), Bayer
(from Bavaria, German
Bayern). Böhm
indicates that a family originated in Bohemia.
- A special case of geographical names were those derived from a
building or landmark, e.g. a Busch (bush). Before the advent of street
names and numbers, even for long times afterwards, many important
buildings like inns, mills and farmsteads were given names (see
also Der Lachs zu Danzig). Such a place was
often better known than the people living in it; the people would
get their 'family' name from the building. This name could be
combined with a profession: Rosenbauer (rose-farmer, from
a farmstead called 'the rose'); Kindlmüller (child's
miller, from a mill named 'the Christmas child', 'the prodigal
child' or 'the king's child'). The name of the building could also
be used as is: Bär (Bear); Engels (from Engel,
angel).
- Immigration, often sponsored by local authorities, also brought
foreign family names into the German speaking regions. Depending on
regional history, geography and economics, many family names have
French, Dutch, Italian, Hungarian
or Slavic
(e.g. Polish) origins. Sometimes they
survived in their original form; in other cases, the spelling would
be adapted to German (the Slavic ending
ic becoming the German -itz or -itsch).
Over time, the spelling often changed to reflect native German
pronunciation (Sloothaak for the Dutch
Sloothaag); but some names, such as those of French Huguenots settling in Prussia, retained their spelling but with the
pronunciation that would come naturally to a German reading the
name: Marquard,
pronounced marcar in French, ended up being pronounced
Markuart much like the German Markwart from which
it was originally derived.
The preposition von
("of") was used to distinguish Nobility; for example, if someone was baron of
the village of Veltheim, his family name would be von
Veltheim. In modern times, people who were elevated to
nobility often had a 'von' added to their name. For example, Johann Wolfgang Goethe had
his name changed to Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. This
practice ended with the abolition of the monarchy in Germany and
Austria in 1919. In some areas, such as Switzerland, von is also used in
geographical names that are not noble, as in von Däniken.
The same is true in the Netherlands and Flanders, where Dutch is spoken
(a language closely related to German), and where this type of
family name is very common. Many German towns occur in Dutch
surnames (Van Gogh, Van Keulen, Van
Gulik, Van Bon, etc.) but not in German ones.
With family names originating locally, many names display
particular characteristics of the local dialects, such as the south
German, Austrian and Swiss diminutive endings -l -el,
'-erl, -le or -li as in Kleibl,
Schäuble or Nägeli (from
'Nagel', nail)
Many family names have no obvious connection with a community,
occupation, or station in life. One of these is Geier, which connotes a bird (vulture) and the oral history of peasant origin pertaining to a
myth that human babies
were abducted by gigantic Birds of prey who gave up their captives
only after the villagers attacked and destroyed their nests.
See also
References
- Rosa Kohlheim, Volker Kohlheim : Familiennamen:
Herkunft und Bedeutung von 20000 Nachnamen (Family Names:
Origin and Meaning of 20,000 Last Names), 2000, Duden, ISBN 3-411-70851-4