![]() ![]() Gender is indicated by the associatedīyname. The names are recorded in Latin.Īn Index to the Given Names in the 1292 Census of Paris,Īn alphabetical list of one example each of some of the given namesĪppearing in the census. Names from the Abbey of Auberive, 1219-1244, by Constanza of ThamesreachĪ handful of masculine and feminine names from charters relating to the Abbey of Auberive, about 300 km south-east of Paris. Latinized French Names from 12th and 13th C Parisian Cartularies by Aryanhwy merch CatmaelĪ collection of given names and bynames from Latin records. The Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem was Frankish in origin.Īcademy of Saint Gabriel report 3009 This report discusses late-11th century Norman feminine names. Given names and bynames from a collection of charters issued by Melisande, Queen of Jerusalemn, between 11. Latinized Names from 12th Century Jerusalem, by Alys Mackyntoich. Many are of Breton origin, some are Frankish ![]() Report 2011 Contains some masculine and feminine given names from 9th-11th century Report 2397 The report discusses 9th century Frankish naming customs and offersĪ short list of feminine given names and a longer one of masculineġ0th Century Frankish Names from the Survey of Neuillay, by Wil YannacouliasĪ list of masculine and feminine given names, with frequencies. Germanic personae, taken from Gregory of Tours' History of theįranks and from Two Lives of Charlemagne, published by Lists of masculine and feminine given names suitable for early Masculine & Feminine Names from the Merovingian Line c.400-c.600Ī list of names of members of the Merovingian royal family.Įarly Germanic Names from Primary Sources, by Nicolaa de Bracton Articles onįrankish Name Construction A short excerpt from Stephen Wilson, The Means of Naming,Ĭompiled by Guntram von Wolkenstein. Languages of the north and ancestors of modern French. This index contains articles on names in Frankish and Old French, These were different languages, not just dialects of the same language, and The most significant division was between the langueĭ'oil, or French, spoken in the north, and the langue d'oc, alsoĬalled Occitan or Provençal, spoken in the south. True in our period: It was a collection of dialects, some quite similar, Medieval Naming Guides: Frankish and French French Namesįrance today is a unified country with a common language. ![]()
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