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Frankenstein

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The claim in the picture caption at the top of the page, that Frankenstein is a compound family name, is quite mistaken. Its a toponymic surname from any one of several places called Frankenstein in various parts of Germany. --81.151.226.154 (talk) 11:14, 26 March 2012 (UTC)[reply]

The caption links to Compound (linguistics), and Frankenstein certainly is that: a word composed of two roots. Could be worded better, admittedly. —Tamfang (talk) 07:19, 12 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Isn't it also offensive? Out of all the examples the poster could have selected, he chose to associate Jews with the name of a hideous fictional monster? Is anyone fooled by this? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 96.224.208.94 (talk) 21:27, 11 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]

No, not offensive. FRANKENSTEIN was being used as a surname by German Jews (Breslau, etc.) 25 years before Mary Shelley's novel appeared. The name referred to a nearby town. Oh, and the monster had no name--Frankenstein was the doctor, and he wasn't Jewish either.RogerLustig (talk) 17:56, 12 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

FML (First, Middle, Last that is)

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Hyacinth, I think your graphic is worthwhile, not least to contribute a very solid basic framework for discussion. Thank you! However, the "Johann" in J S Bach's name is perhaps not the most crystalline example, because it comes from a particular naming tradition in which the majority of male offspring received compound names that began with one of only a very small repertoire of first names. Indeed, J S Bach shared his first name with at least 2 brothers, 3 sons and his father--but also with Mozart, who was baptized Johannes Chrysostomus Wolfgangus Theophilus, with Sigismundus added at confirmation. Around the house and in much of the world, the various Bachs were disambiguated from other families by their last names and from one another by their 2nd and 3rd names. Nobody ever referred to Mozart as Johann either, aside from the odd moment in church. (Nor as Theophilus, which he preferred to translate in any of a half-dozen ways, Amadeus being none of them except as a jest.)

All of which is to say that there might be a better example to point to. Perhaps "Dwight David Eisenhower," not least because the "David" originally came first, and Ike reversed the names because everyone called him Dwight. Yes, that's a complexity, but a pointed one. And yes, this is an article about family, i.e., last names, but even there, being caused to think about J S Bach as Johann might be distracting to some.

Hmmmm..."Sebastian J Bach"--has a nice ring to it, y'know? I see a series of cheap novels about a hard-boiled musicologist...down these mean staves a man must go... RogerLustig (talk) 11:42, 26 October 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Contradiction

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I've just read this article for the first time and have noticed a very bad contradiction at the top of the section English Speaking Countries. The current article states:

By 1400, most English and Scottish people had acquired surnames, but many Scottish and Welsh people did not adopt surnames until the 17th century, or even later

In the one sentence I am reading that most Scottish people had acquired surnames by 1400, and also that many Scottish people did not adopt surnames until the 17th century". There are no references for either claim.

Could someone who has some knowledge of the subject and can find suitable references please fix this?

--Savlonn (talk) 13:24, 23 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Family name in Primorje

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The article mentiones nothing about family names as used in Primorje. You see, e. g. families in Baška traditionally get family names such as Yoshamÿa – see the Mihovil Lovrić article or e. g. Lozini – after Alojz – this is the name of my maternal grandmothers' family in Vinodol; yet, their legal surname remains the same. These family names are recorded on neither church nor state documents; yet, this tradition has existed for centuries, it seems. I do not know where it comes from; I just know that both my paternal grandfathers' and my maternal grandmothers' familites – both of which are from Primorje have such family names. -- Neven Lovrić (talk) 08:29, 28 August 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Swedish, Not Scandinavian?

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The article currently states: "Later on, people from the Scandinavian middle classes, particularly artisans and town dwellers, adopted names in a similar fashion to that of the nobility. Family names joining two elements from nature such as the Swedish Bergman ("mountain man"), Holmberg ("island mountain"), Lindgren ("linden branch"), Sandström and Åkerlund ("field meadow") were quite frequent and remain common today. The same is true for similar Norwegian and Danish names."

I'm not aware of this method of creating family names ever being common in Norway. In fact, names of this type are generally assumed to be of Swedish origin when encountered in Norway. Unless someone can provide an example of a Norwegian family name created this way, I will remove the claim that "the same is true for similar Norwegian names". I suspect such names were not commonly created in Denmark, either, but I don't know enough about Danish family names to be certain. Maitreya (talk) 09:27, 30 August 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Merger proposal

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The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.


Merge per WP:ENGLISH WP:COMMONNAME and WP:POVFORK. The simple fact is that in plain English, "surname" and "family name" are complete synonyms. Surname admits as much in its lead; family name tries to bury the idea by claiming surnames are "Western". It then proceeds to use "surname" more often than "family name" in its lead, while discussing surnames from all over the world and within historical contexts having nothing to do with the "West". The OED defines their primary current senses as:

surname: The name which a person bears in common with the other members of his family...; a family name
family name: A hereditary name shared by members of the same family, as distinct from a given or personal name; a surname.

There is a minor obsolete sense of surname in the use of "generic epithet" that occurs before the 19th century, but the WP:PRIMARYTOPICs of these two name spaces entirely overlap as is displayed by the repeated attempts to merge them (see below) and by the pages' treatment of identical content.

Merge to surname (despite its article having a shorter history at Wiki) per WP:ENGLISH WP:COMMONNAME. Per ngram, "surname" has been more common than "family name" (usually by orders of magnitude) for the last 400 years; as can be seen at any age of Google Books, that additional usage had very little to do with the sense of "epithet". ("Last name" is on an upswing but obviously does have some WP:BIASy connection to European names.) Google Scholar brings back 85k hits for "family name" (often in its biological sense), 165k generally on-point hits for "last name", and 135k completely on-topic hits for "surname". Google Books and vanilla always break down a little on such common searches, but the estimates are (@books) 1.2m hits for "family name" (mostly on topic), 1.7m hits for "last name", and 3.5m hits for "surname" and (@van) 64.8m, 870m, and 450m, all essentially confirming the ngram.

There have been failed merge attempts before. The voting on those went:

  • merge: Vltava 68, Knillis, RoryEAAS, II, Fgnievinski, Felix the Cassowary
  • fork: Undead, JDM1991, Rajakhr, Carsten12345, Ariadne55, Notwillywanka

Carsten objected because he had his own plan to revamp all Wikipedia's name articles. Undead, JDM, NWW, and Ariadne all objected because they all felt surname was a larger term that included things "family name" doesn't. Except that's untrue both in common usage and specifically: the OED definition of "patronymic" specifically discusses "family names" derived from the father and not "surnames". Meanwhile, any patronym or epithet that is not passed down (as in Iceland, Islamic names, etc.) is not a surname but an epithet, a patronym, a nisba, etc. Even when certain foreign words (like nisba or xing) are translated as "surname", the specifics of their use need to be addressed in a separate article and can't override the PRIMARYTOPIC of "surname".

Felix the Cassowary captured the general confusion by saying he would really like a fork (since family name was considered overlong) but is forced to realize "...a distinction between "surnames" and "family names" is not one that I've ever made; I have long been under the impression (for instance) that Bjork doesn't have a surname, she has a patronym instead." At Talk:Surname, WhisperToMe wondered what information the article could have that wasn't covered at family name; Propaniac replied that he'd just delete the page except "there should be a general article about surnames"

My thoughts? This fork is causing needless confusion and duplication and should be stopped already; family name is overlong and not the actual common name. Your thoughts? — LlywelynII 04:24, 20 December 2013 (UTC)[reply]

The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

surname != patriname

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The article says at the top

In this article, family name and surname both mean the patrilineal (literally, father-line) surname, handed down from or inherited from the father's line or patriline, unless explicitly stated otherwise. Thus, the term "maternal surname" means the patrilineal surname which one's mother inherited from either or both of her parents. For a discussion of matrilineal ('mother-line') surnames, passing from mothers to daughters, see matrilineal surname.

But the word surname should not be abused in that matter. The word surname should be used to refer to "The name which a person bears in common with the other members of his family" as noted in the definition from OED, patriname should be used to refer to a name from the father's line and matriname should be used for a name from the mother's line. This should be resolved during the merge with Surname. ---Vroo (talk) 06:17, 29 January 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Origins of African American Family Names and Slavery

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NYT offers a primary source from 1998. It states:

"After the Civil War, when the passage of the 13th Amendment freed 4 million slaves, most had been barred by their owners from having last names. Many picked the surnames of the former presidents Jefferson and Jackson. Washington also became a popular choice."
See: Knowlton, B. (1998, February 19). Among Blacks, Washington Ranks as the Top Surname. New York Times. Retrieved from http://www.nytimes.com/1998/02/19/news/19iht-topics.t_15.html. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Monyprice (talkcontribs) 20:52, 16 October 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Pakistani surname problem

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There seems to be some inconsistency regarding pakistani last names. For starters, names like Shaikh or Khajwa do not indicate arab ancestry since these names are just titles and were brought in during islamic expansion. More or less we can say people with these names adopted them due to conversion to Islam, i think this should be removed or atleast changed to "Islamic names" for that section so people do not become confused. Akmal94 (talk) 02:06, 8 March 2015 (UTC)[reply]

are surname and last name different

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I've heard last name and surname are two different terms. The word surname, though, might not be familiar for people who don't edit here on Wikipedia. In Western countries, more people use last name and not surname. What's the reason? Angela Maureen (talk) 03:27, 15 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]

  • This merger is languishing because it'll require achieving not only consensus to merge but also how. This point is one that'll have to be cleared up. The exegetic Merriam-Webster example under surname, "da Vinci" (along with similar definitions in other dictionaries), shows how a surname may very well not be a family name at all. Surnames in this sense historically precede last names. "Last name" here in Wikipedia already redirects to "family name." That should stay as it is, with the "family name" article clearly explaining that "last name" means the same only in certain locales or contexts. The "family name" article can probably also handle the bulk of mergeable content from "surname" but the sections on "byname" and the meaning of "surname" that is nearly synonymous with "epithet" or "nickname" will have to remain under "surname" to be treated separately. It seems like a tall order. - phi (talk) 18:10, 6 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]
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Removal of unsourced statement about Eastern cultures

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I have removed

Last names are more important in Eastern cultures than the given first name, which is why they usually go first.[citation needed]

It's been unsourced for nearly two years now, and it strikes me as unlikely that such a generalization would apply across head-first and head-last languages, both of which are associated with Eastern cultures. 98.16.156.130 (talk) 02:14, 20 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Not to say it is nonsense. Staszek Lem (talk) 18:04, 20 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Merge to surname

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I have completed merging the most important content of Family name to Surname, per the consensus above.

The remaining content of Family name has been restructured and moved to Surnames by country. This was too much to fit comfortably on a single page. This is in conformance with Wikipedia:Summary style. – wbm1058 (talk) 20:14, 11 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

An excellent job on a gargantuan task! - phi (talk) 21:34, 11 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]