I came across these in a book on New York genealogy. Technically some of the names are Connecticut, England, or Holland, but since they are in the ancestry of New Yorkers, I felt the title for this post applied.
GIRLS
Aeltje
Jacomyntje
BOYS
Banyer
Beant -
Catoonah- name of an Indian chief in Long Island in the early 1700s
Clermont
Cuyler- I've seen Kyler in recent years, but this spelling was the first name of the author of a book on genealogy published in 1914.
Eckford
Goozen
Levinus
Medad - name of a New England colonial inhabitant
Roelif
Wolrave
Robert Frost's poem "A Cliff Dwelling" reminds me of the people who must have lived here "Oh years ago--ten thousand years" and enjoyed the beauty and safety of a cliff. A place "to rest from his besetting fears". Welcome to mine.
In 2014 I featured a series of blog posts introducing you to 2,014 names. For the most part they were names that were brand new to me as well. Some names may be more familiar but I found the meaning or origin or some other aspect of the name made it worthy of inclusion here. You may love some of the names, you may hate some, but hopefully you enjoy learning about all of them.
Find names by origin
Find Names By Origin
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Abenaki African-Twi Akkadian Albanian Algonquian American Amorite Anglo-Saxon Arabic Aragonese Aramaic Araucan Armenian Assyrian Asturian Avestan Azeri Babylonian Basque Belarusian Benin Bosnian Brazilian Portuguese Breton Bulgarian Catalan Celtic Chechen Chinese Coptic Cornish Croatian Czech Dacian Dakota Sioux Danish Dutch Egyptian English Eskimo Estonian Faroese Finnish Flemish Frankish French Frisian Gaelic Galician Gaulish German Gothic Greek Hawaiian Hebrew Hittite Hungarian Hurrian Igbo Indonesian Iranian Irish Gaelic Italian Japanese Javanese Ladino Latin Latvian Limburgish Malayalam Mandinka Manx Maori Mongolian Mormon Nahuatl Nigerian Norman Norse Norwegian Occitan Ojibwe Persian Phoenician Pictish Polish Portuguese Proto-Indo-European Quahadi Roman Russian Sabine Saimogaitian Sanskrit Saxon Scottish Semitic Shakespearean Silurian Sindarin Slavic Slavonic Slovak Sogdian Spanish Sumerian Swahili Swedish Tongan Turkic Vietnamese Visigothic Welsh Xitsonga Yiddish Yoruba
Showing posts with label Kyler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kyler. Show all posts
Sunday, November 4, 2018
Saturday, March 1, 2014
Names #425-431
GIRLS
Herleva - Germanic, from 'hari' meaning 'army' and either 'era' meaning 'honor' or 'erla' meaning 'noble'. Herleva was the mother of William the Conqueror who led the Norman invasion of England. Other names wikipedia listed for her were Herleve, Arlette, Arletta, Arlotte, and Harlette.
(thanks to BehindtheName for the meaning of Herleva)
Juandalynn - Babynamespedia.com suggests that Juandalynn comes from putting Juanita and Lynn together. I suppose, they are seeing the transformation due to lazy speaking or dialect or whatever where the long e sound is lost and the t sounds more like a d. Since Juana (and Juanita) are female variants of a Hebrew name, they would have the same meaning, which is, 'God is gracious' or 'God is
merciful'. Lynn comes from English and means "meadow" or "field". However, I could also see someone spelling a name they had heard and did not know the correct spelling for this way, if they were familiar with Juana or Juanita, with a little fudging in some instances on the inclusion of a d. One name like this I can think of is Gwendolyn or its shorter form Wendoline. Gwendolyn is Welsh and comes from the roots "gwyn" meaning "white" or "fair" or "blessed" and 'dolen' meaning 'loop' or 'ring' or 'bow' or 'link' (as in a chain). Thanks to Wikipedia on the meaning of 'dolen'.
When I first saw this name, though, it seemed as though someone had added 'lynn' to the end of Wanda, but instead of spelling Wanda the regular way, had opted for something more exotic in spelling the first syllable (or most of it) like the Spanish Juan. Wanda comes from the Germanic "Wend" which is the name of an ancient European tribe also known as the Vandals, famous for 'wandering' over Europe and bring destruction to many established communities (or 'vandalizing' them). To 'wend' your way is to go in a wavy manner, around this thing, over that way, up this, down that, etc. Imagine a river that follows a curvy route, or a road. The word 'wanderer' comes from this root. Babynamespedia.com pointed out that the name Wanda may also come from a very old word for 'family' or from Polish, as there was an early medieval princess Wanda.
A third way of seeing this name is that is only a modern invention, taking sounds from more than two names and arranging them as it pleases the creator. So that Lynn could perhaps be seen as coming from English while the middle part of the name is contributed by Wanda and the first part of the name derived from the Spanish Juana. Some people feel this means the name has 'no' language of origin and no real meaning'. I'm curious what your opinion is on this name. I am also eager for more information on how people with this name got the name.
BOYS
Kyler - according to Llewellyn's Book of Names this is an English surname meaning "the killer" and they explain it as meaning perhaps the person was a butcher or hangman by profession. Other sources say that it is a Dutch surname meaning 'archer'. Still other sources say it is based on the name Kyle and other that is an invented name, taking Tyler and swapping the t for a k. Personally, I think its current popularity as a first name is more closely related to the recent popularity of the name Schuyler. I managed to find another person of a similar opinion - Louis MacWethy in "The Book of Names, Especially Related to the Early Palatines and the Settlers in the Mohawk Valley". Another genealogy book suggests a possible link with Schuyler and also the surname Keller.
Lilburn - I found two different possible derivations for this name. One is that it is from 'lily' and 'burn' which means 'river'. Lilburn is a city in England 'by a stream where the lilies grow', according to Wikipedia. Lilburn is a surname for an aristocratic family there.
The other possibility I found suggests that the Lil in the family name of Lilburn comes from Danish and means 'little, in which case, it would mean on the whole 'little river'.
Mirabeau - the name of some places in France and the last name of the Comtes de Mirabeau. It seems to be French and mean 'beautiful view', rather like the name Fairview that is so common in English. Its use as a first name in America might be related to the Comte de Mirabeau who lived in the latter half of the 18th century, a contemporary of George Washington. Or it might be more closely related to Mirabeau Buonaparte Lamar, second president of the Republic of Texas, who was named for the two important French revolutionaries the Comte de Mirabeau and Napoleon Buonaparte.
Norvell -French, meaning "northern town", from 'nor' meaning 'north' and 'ville' meaning 'town'. Norvell, obviously is a variant spelling of Norville. (all this courtesy of babynamespedia.com)

(thanks to BehindtheName for the meaning of Herleva)
![]() |
the miracle of the seagulls |
merciful'. Lynn comes from English and means "meadow" or "field". However, I could also see someone spelling a name they had heard and did not know the correct spelling for this way, if they were familiar with Juana or Juanita, with a little fudging in some instances on the inclusion of a d. One name like this I can think of is Gwendolyn or its shorter form Wendoline. Gwendolyn is Welsh and comes from the roots "gwyn" meaning "white" or "fair" or "blessed" and 'dolen' meaning 'loop' or 'ring' or 'bow' or 'link' (as in a chain). Thanks to Wikipedia on the meaning of 'dolen'.
When I first saw this name, though, it seemed as though someone had added 'lynn' to the end of Wanda, but instead of spelling Wanda the regular way, had opted for something more exotic in spelling the first syllable (or most of it) like the Spanish Juan. Wanda comes from the Germanic "Wend" which is the name of an ancient European tribe also known as the Vandals, famous for 'wandering' over Europe and bring destruction to many established communities (or 'vandalizing' them). To 'wend' your way is to go in a wavy manner, around this thing, over that way, up this, down that, etc. Imagine a river that follows a curvy route, or a road. The word 'wanderer' comes from this root. Babynamespedia.com pointed out that the name Wanda may also come from a very old word for 'family' or from Polish, as there was an early medieval princess Wanda.
A third way of seeing this name is that is only a modern invention, taking sounds from more than two names and arranging them as it pleases the creator. So that Lynn could perhaps be seen as coming from English while the middle part of the name is contributed by Wanda and the first part of the name derived from the Spanish Juana. Some people feel this means the name has 'no' language of origin and no real meaning'. I'm curious what your opinion is on this name. I am also eager for more information on how people with this name got the name.

Kyler - according to Llewellyn's Book of Names this is an English surname meaning "the killer" and they explain it as meaning perhaps the person was a butcher or hangman by profession. Other sources say that it is a Dutch surname meaning 'archer'. Still other sources say it is based on the name Kyle and other that is an invented name, taking Tyler and swapping the t for a k. Personally, I think its current popularity as a first name is more closely related to the recent popularity of the name Schuyler. I managed to find another person of a similar opinion - Louis MacWethy in "The Book of Names, Especially Related to the Early Palatines and the Settlers in the Mohawk Valley". Another genealogy book suggests a possible link with Schuyler and also the surname Keller.


Mirabeau - the name of some places in France and the last name of the Comtes de Mirabeau. It seems to be French and mean 'beautiful view', rather like the name Fairview that is so common in English. Its use as a first name in America might be related to the Comte de Mirabeau who lived in the latter half of the 18th century, a contemporary of George Washington. Or it might be more closely related to Mirabeau Buonaparte Lamar, second president of the Republic of Texas, who was named for the two important French revolutionaries the Comte de Mirabeau and Napoleon Buonaparte.
![]() |
beautiful view of the Texas prairie |
![]() |
the northern French city of Rouen |
Norvell -French, meaning "northern town", from 'nor' meaning 'north' and 'ville' meaning 'town'. Norvell, obviously is a variant spelling of Norville. (all this courtesy of babynamespedia.com)
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