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Two sturdy arms, brandishing such a weapon, form the usual crest of the family, with the above motto, Periissem ni per-iissem —'I had died, unless I had gone through with it ' ". [13] Arbuthnott [4] Crest: A peacock's head couped at the neck Proper. [14] Motto: Laus Deo [14] [Latin, 'Praise God'] [14] Chief: Keith Arbuthnott 17th Viscount of ...
The oldest public record of the surname dates to 1176. [3] In the 2010 United States Census, Ward was the 79th most common surname. [4] It is the 78th most common surname in Ireland. [5] It was the 31st most common surname in the 1991 UK census and 40th in 2001 census, [6] and in 2007, was found to be the most common surname in Lutterworth ...
The family of the Crawford sheriff of Ayr produced the main branches of the clan: the Crawfords of Auchinames and the Crawfords of Craufurdland. [2] The chiefly line is reckoned to be that of Auchinames in Renfrewshire who received a grant for their lands from Robert the Bruce in 1320. [2] After the clan disbanded, the clan split into families.
Davidson. A Victorian depiction of the clan painted by R. R. McIan.. The Clan Davidson or Clan Dhai are recorded as being wiped out as a fighting force in 1370 at the Battle of Invernahavon, which was fought between the Chattan Confederation and the Clan Cameron. [4]
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This Blair family can trace its ancestry back to Stephen de Blair, who held lands in the Parish of Blair in Gowrie, now named Blairgowrie. He also witnessed a charter on the lands of Balgillo, Angus, by Dovenald the Abbot of Brechin to the monastery at Arbroath between 1204 and 1211. [5] These Blairs have several cadet branches: of Ardblair,
In the United States, the surname ranked as the 946th most common surname in the 2000 U.S. Census.There were 33,914 individuals recorded at that time using the surname Terrell, and of these, 57.43% identified as being white, 38.31% black, 0.27% Asian and Pacific Islander, 0.77% American Indian and Native Alaskan, 1.47% as Hispanic ethnic origin and 1.75% of more than one race.
Sharp is an English language surname, cognate to the German scharf. It is also akin to words which have the sense of scraping, e.g. Latin scrobis 'ditch', Russian skresti 'to scrape'. [citation needed] Recorded variations of the surname include Sharp, Sharpe, Shairp, Sharpes,Sharps [1] and the diminutives Sharpin, Sharplin and Sharpling.