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General => The Common Room => The Lighter Side => Topic started by: cbcarolyn on Wednesday 20 September 06 09:09 BST (UK)

Title: First names - indication of roots?
Post by: cbcarolyn on Wednesday 20 September 06 09:09 BST (UK)
Tracing back my Everett family I have found a whole bunch of names that I feel are traditionally Jewish eg Ephraim, Reuben, Manassah, Benjamin, Mahala, birth dates all around 1830.  Would this mean that I have some Jewish roots or did people use the old testament for inspiration for names?
Title: Re: First names - indication of roots?
Post by: Garethboxing on Wednesday 20 September 06 09:49 BST (UK)
In Wales there were certainly plenty of people given Biblical names though not Jewish, particularly whenever there was a Revival. I suppose the modern equivalent would be the rash of Kylies around today...
                Gareth
Title: Re: First names - indication of roots?
Post by: cbcarolyn on Wednesday 20 September 06 09:57 BST (UK)
I did wonder whether it was a Kylie type of thing ;D - wasn't sure if that sort of thing happened then, I don't think they had a TV!!!!

Maybe someone had learnt to read and they were extracting the names to be a bit different.  These were in Harlow.
Title: Re: First names - indication of roots?
Post by: avm228 on Wednesday 20 September 06 10:09 BST (UK)
My Eldred family in Essex (no Jewish roots - in fact they were parish clerks for generations) used all of those names except for Manassah, plus several other Old Testament names - Ezekiel, Emanuel, Ezra, Jabez, Hesia, Ephraisa, and lots and lots of Rebeccas.   Mahala in particular seems to have been popular in Essex.  It's quite a modern idea that these names are characteristically Jewish - up to the first half of the 19th century they were used enthusiastically by Christian families, as they still are in the US.

Anna :)
Title: Re: First names - indication of roots?
Post by: Nadine Moore on Wednesday 20 September 06 22:23 BST (UK)
Could it be that they went to church more regularly than nowadays and heard these names every week in the bible readings?
Title: Re: First names - indication of roots?
Post by: Lendevon on Wednesday 20 September 06 22:43 BST (UK)
All the names mentioned were common in the Essex fishing community where my ancestors were living in the 19th century.
Mehalah was the title of a very popular novel set on Mersea Island, Essex. The Essex answer to Lorna Doone.
Title: Re: First names - indication of roots?
Post by: cbcarolyn on Wednesday 20 September 06 23:16 BST (UK)
thanks for all the replies - I had never heard of Mahala before.  These are a way from Mersea - but can see they may have been a connection.