[ANSTHRLD] Consult help
Maridonna
maridonna at maridonna.com
Wed Oct 7 16:17:47 PDT 2009
Joe McGrew wrote:
>
> I found a Saint Gabriel report that says that Anton is the 16th Cen.
> German version of Antonius. I have seen in the surname de le Tour
> passed, or the submitter says he can get documentation from a history
> of the Letour winery as a location in order to use "de Letour" as a
> descriptive. Submitter would like the correct name form for 14th Cen.
> France, but will use his legal first name "Antonio" if a historically
> appropriate form won't work for him.
Anthoni is found in Occitan names from Saint Flour, France,
1380-1385. Url:
http://heraldry.sca.org/names/french/saintflour.html
Names Found in Commercial Documents from Bordeaux, 1470-1520
http://www.ellipsis.cx/~liana/names/french/bordeaux.html
Lists several variant of 'Anthony': Anthoine, Anthoinne,
Anthoni, Anthonio, Anthony, Anthoyne.
Morlet, Marie-Therese. Étude d’Anthroponymie Picarde:_ Les
noms de personne en Haute Picardie aux xiii, xiv, xv
siècles_. Les Presses du Palais Royal, Paris, 1967. P 61
lists <de Latour> and is dated to between 1300 and 1399.
<de la Tour>, 1421, from Ary's article
'French Surnames from Paris, 1421, 1423 & 1438'
http://www.ellipsis.cx/~liana/names/french/paris1423surnames.html
I haven't found the spelling de Letour so far.
--
Andrea Hicks/ Maridonna
Why buy while they die? Adopt a rescue or shelter pet today.
More information about the Heralds
mailing list