The several versions of the original manuscripts are dated between c. Methodology: “drawn from the custumals of 21 manors held by the Abbey of Bec as printed in Select Documents of the English Lands of the Abbey of Bec, edited for the Royal Historical Society by Marjorie Chibnall, Ph.D., Camden Third Series, Volume LXXIII, London, Offices of the Royal Historical Society, 1951. If you have any questions please get it touch. I hope you find these lists useful or at least interesting. Presumably some of the ones near the bottom were pet names or nicknames that stuck. Of course, there are more men recorded than there are women and it is likely that there were fewer standard options for women’s names however for both men and women there are a number of unusual names that appear only once. The first 10 or so in the women’s list and the first 15 or so in the men’s list probably accounted for 60%-70% of all given names. But generally speaking the ones near the top will be more commonly encountered. I will put them in what seems to be a rough order of frequency in the records but there will be all kinds of selection biases and regional variations. There are different sources and different methodologies for collecting and ordering the names. Many names were recorded as a Latinised version of what would have been the name as it was used in every day life (for example Osbertus in the record would have been called Osbert by his mother and, no doubt, Bert – or Ozzy? – by his mates) so I have used the Anglicised version. Each name has many variations but I will give the most common or my preferred version. In a work of fiction, though, it gets confusing when too many minor characters have exactly the same name.īelow are two lists of the most common women’s and men’s names from the early 13th century in England, taken from a selection of online sources that list names from contemporary documents. Almost every man recorded in history at this time is called William, Richard, John or Robert and the women are all Matilda, Eleanor or Isabella. In my research for Vampire Crusader and Vampire Outlaw I needed a selection of period names for the fictional characters.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |