
Something I created with https://scaledinnovation.com/gg/biMapper.html To my knowledge this uses data from the 19th century. I assigned surnames to groups based off of linguistic origin of a surname. A surname might be "Norman" but that does not mean that family is Norman in origin. Here are the surname groups:
- NORSE: Aglionby, Ainscough, Airey, Antrobus, Applegarth, Applewhite, Asby, Askwith, Asquith, Axtell, Bagby, Battersby, Becker, Beeby, Beetham, Begbie, Bielby, Bigby, Biggar, Bigland, Bingham, Birkbeck, Birtwistle, Blaby, Blaisdell, Blyton, Botten, Bousfield, Braithwaite, Briscoe, Brumby, Buckby, Burby, Busby, Bushby, Busk, Calthorpe, Carr, Cartledge, Catterall, Cawston, Claxton, Cleator, Clouston, Coghill, Colby, Colston, Corey, Corstorphine, Cory, Cosby, Coupland, Couse, Crosby, Crosthwaite, Croxton, Danby, Darby, Denby, Dingwall, Docker, Dowbiggin, Dowthwaite, Ellerby, Enderby, Farman, Fawthrop, Fenby, Fitton, Flook, Frisby, Gadsby, Gamble, Gardham, Garstang, Garthwaite, Gill, Goldthwaite, Gooderham, Grigsby, Grime, Grimoldby, Groby, Gunby, Gunn, Gunstone, Gunton, Haakenson, Haig, Hakanson, Haldane, Hanby, Harby, Hasty, Hazelrigg, Hebblethwaite, Hesketh, Holderby, Holderness, Holmyard, Holness, Holtby, Hornsby, Hulme, Hungate, Iliffe, Ingleby, Kelby, Kelham, Kerr, Kilby, Killingbeck, Kirkby, Kirkley, Knott, Lait, Laithwaite, Latham, Lewthwaite, Lingwood, Linklater, Linkletter, Litherland, Lofthouse, Lofton, Loseby, Lowthorpe, Lusby, MacAuliffe, Malham, Manby, Mansergh, Maplebeck, Marbeck, McAuliff, McAuliffe, McCaskill, McCauley, McCorquodale, McSwain, Mellanby, Micklethwaite, Mumby, Myerscough, Norby, Oakey, Oglethorpe, Oldham, Olliff, Olsson, Orme, Ormerod, Ormiston, Ormsby, Outhwaite, Owenby, Poe, Quarmby, Rainford, Ranby, Ravenhill, Rawdon, Rokeby, Rolleston, Roscoe, Roughton, Satterthwaite, Sawrey, Saxby, Scaife, Scarborough, Scarff, Scargill, Scarisbrick, Scholes, Scowcroft, Scruton, Seatter, Selby, Shimwell, Sibthorpe, Skaife, Skeat, Skipwith, Smithey, Sneath, Somerby, Sorley, Sowerby, Sparham, Sparkes, Sparks, Stackpole, Stanwix, Strutt, Sturgis, Svenson, Swaby, Swainston, Tait
- NORMAN: Almond, Archer, Argent, Aucourte, Avery, Bailey, Banister, Baskerville, Basset, Beauchamp, Beaumont, Bellamy, Belford, Blampied, Blanchard, Blodgett, Bonner, Brazier, Brocket, Bryan, Bullen, Bunker, Burgoyne, Burke, de Burgh, Butcher, Boucher, Carpenter, Carter, Chamberlain, Chambers, Champernon, Champernowne, Cambernon, Champnon, Chancellor, Corbett, Courtenay, Cruise, Curtis, Dalton, Darrell, Daubney, Devere, de Vere, Devereux, Disney, Dorsey, Draper, Drury, D'Arcy, D'Onston, de Lacy, De Quincey, De Marisco, de Voil, Farmer, Fay, de Fae, FitzJoly, FitzWilliam, Fletcher, Florence, Fortescue, Francis, French, Gascoignes, Geary, Godfrey, Grant, Granville, Harcourt, Henry, Hirons, Hamblin, Hussey, Ilbert, Ingram, Ingrams, Irons, Jolly, Lamar, Lamarr, l'Argent, Latimer, Leavitt, Lever, Levett, Longe, Lovell, Lowell, Luci, Lyon, Lyons, Lyle, Major, Malet, Mallory, Mandeville, Marion, Mayeux, Mayor, Montgomery, Montagu, Mottershead, Mundy, Morris, Neville, Osment, Payne, Percy, Pomeroy, Purefoy, Quincy, Richmond, Roy, Royall, Russell, Rockett, Sayre, Sidney, Sinclair, Spencer, St Clair, St Leger, Saint Claire, Seymour, Taillefer, Talbot, Taney, Terrell, Tracey, Travis, Varley, Verley, Vavasour, Vere, Vernon, Vincent, Vipond, Wallace, Warren, Wharmby, Wilburn, Worley, Wyvill
- OLD ENGLISH: Acker, Ackerman, Adair, Ainsley, Airaldi, Airò, Akerman, Akers, Alden, Alfredson, Alfredsson, Alger, Allard, Alvey, Alvin, Appleby, Appleton, Arkwright, Arterberry, Arterbury, Ash, Ashley, Ashton, Ashworth, Aston, Atteberry, Atterberry, Attwater, Attwood, Atwater, Atwood, Auden, Audley, Auteberry, Avery, Ayers, Aylmer, Ayrton, Ayton, Badcock, Bain, Baines, Baker, Ball, Ballard, Bannerman, Barclay, Bardsley, Barnet, Barnett, Barton, Baxter, Bean, Beasley, Beech, Bentley, Benton, Berry, Beverley, Beverly, Bird, Black, Blackbourne, Blackburn, Blackman, Blackwood, Blake, Blakeley, Blakely, Blakeslee, Blakesley, Bloodworth, Blythe, Boatwright, Bolton, Bone, Boothman, Botwright, Bourke, Bourne, Bower, Bowers, Bradley, Bradshaw, Brewer, Brewster, Bridges, Brierley, Briggs, Brigham, Briley, Brinley, Broadbent, Bronson, Brook, Brooke, Brooks, Brown, Browne, Brownlow, Buckley, Bull, Bullock, Burke, Burnham, Burns, Burroughs, Burrows, Burton, Bush, Byrd, Caldwell, Carman, Cartwright, Cason, Caulfield, Chadwick, Chapman, Cheshire, Chester, Church, Churchill, Clay, Clayton, Cleveland, Clifford, Clifton, Clinton, Coburn, Cock, Cockburn, Cocks, Coke, Cokes, Cole, Colt, Colter, Colton, Combs, Cook, Cooke, Cookson, Coombs, Copperfield, Cox, Crawford, Crawley, Crowley, Dale, Dallas, Dalton, Dane, Darling, Darwin, Dayton, Deadman, Dean, Debenham, Dickman, Downer, Duarte, Dudley, Dunn, Durward, Dwerryhouse, Dyer, Eads, Eady, Earl, Earls, Easom, Eason, Easton, Eaton, Eccleston, Ecclestone, Ford, Fox, Freeman, Hadaway, Haden, Hadley, Haig, Hailey, Hale, Haley, Hall, Hambleton, Hamilton, Hamm, Hampton, Hanley, Harden, Harding, Hardwick, Harford, Hargrave, Harlan, Harland, Harley, Harlow, Harrell, Harrelson, Hart, Hartell, Hartley, Hathaway, Hatheway, Hathway, Haward, Hawk, Hawking, Hawkins, Hawthorn, Hawthorne, Hayden, Hayes, Hayley, Hayter, Hayward, Haywood, Head
What do you think of my map?
Posted by Infinite-Cookie7360

15 Comments
Do you go further than H for old English?
I’m not from the UK so I have no horse in this race, but I’m very surprised about Ireland. I would’ve thought they had more gaelic surnames.
Is this based on current data? One thing that stands out is the prevalence of Old English names in Cork, even compared to most places in England.
How would you categorize patronyms like Jackson, Johnson, Stevenson, Williamson, etc.?
Map is interesting, but it’s worth pointing out that ostensibly the same surname can have multiple origins when names are translated.
Let’s say your name is Seán Ó Ceannabhán. Obviously a Gaelic name. But 19th century census takers would sometimes translate names, other times transliterate them.
In the former case, you’d be John Whitehead. In the latter, Sean Cannavan. In cases where the transliterated form was similar to an English name, that would be recorded as the English name.
What common surnames in Cork are old English? I’m from Cork and struggling to think of them
You should really add Celtic surnames to this
You really shouldn’t be including Ireland without Irish-Gaelic surnames included. It’s a bit misleading to be honest.
I’m from Cork and honestly it’s quite rare you come across an old English surname, especially outside of west cork, Irish surnames are overwhelmingly dominant but you wouldn’t think it based off of this.
The old English names only go up to H?
Poor Shetlands. [This map is probably banned in Scotland](https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-scotland-politics-45733111),
Is it up to us to guess what Blue means and what White means or are you going to tell us at some point?
I think Cork having such a concentration of English surnames would need to be verified because I suspect it’s someone assuming an Irish person with the surname Collins shares ancestry with an English person with the surname Collins.
Which may be true in some cases – but we also have a lot of cases where old Irish surnames like Ó Coileáin were translated into English as Collins (but also Cullen, Culhane and a few others).
This happened countless times in our history, my own surname shares its Irish version with half a dozen other entirely different surnames in English because there was no consistency in surname translation here.
Edit: I’ve looked into this and sure enough, there’s a lot of Irish surnames that were erroneously (or lazily) translated to be the same as existing English surnames but in reality are not related to them. Cork has a good number of them, which are probably leading you to conclude there’s a huge number of English surnames there.
For example, Buckley is a common Cork surname but would be from the Irish surname Ó Buachalla, which is formed from the Irish word ‘buachaill’ (boy). There’s an English surname Buckley from the Lancashire/Derbyshire areas that has an entirely different etymology (“buck meadow”, apparently).
Same with Hayes; there’s an English surname Hayes which comes from the an old English word for a hedged enclosure, whereas the Irish surname Hayes comes from Ó hAodha, meaning “son of Aodh”.
Multiply that by a few dozen and you might think Cork is full of English surnames – there definitely are some genuine English surnames there for centuries but it’s not to the extent that there’s a greater density of them than in England itself!
Is Old English Anglo-Saxon? Or just pre-Norman and therefore including Brythonic and Gaelic surnames as well as Anglo-Saxon?
There’s quite a few of those Old English names that are actually Norman.
Shetland is interesting- more Norman then Norse?
And Moray being so Norman, too