Handy Guide: Scottish Given Names: Popularity, Spelling Variants, Diminutives and Abbreviations

$5.25

The names of our ancestors are the gateway to tracing our family history. This Handy Guide is filled with tables which enable you to find the “very common”and “çommon” Scottish male and female names from 1700s-early 1900s.

8 pages, Digital (.pdf) Download Only

Sold By: Unlock the Past

Description

Handy Guide: Scottish Given Names: Popularity, Spelling Variants, Diminutives and Abbreviations

Carol Baxter, 2019, Publisher: Unlock the Past
8 pages, Digital (.pdf) Download Only

Have you noticed that few of our Scottish ancestors actually carried “Scottish” given names?

Surviving records reveal that in recent centuries one in every two Scottish males was names: John, James or William while a similar proportion of females were named: Mary, Margaret, And or Jane/Jean. Of course, many of these “English” names had Scottish variants or diminutives that were used in common parlance.

To assist researchers in tracing their Scottish ancestors, this Handy Guide explores Scottish given names in use between the mid-1500s and the early 1900s. Each name lists spelling variants as well as diminutives and abbreviations.

This will prove incredibly useful not only when reading old documents or letters which have the names abbreviated, but also to give you clues on alternate spellings of names you could be looking for.