I've been doing a uni course on crime in the early modern period in England and to add some interest while studying, started compiling some of the names I came across. Ok my title was a bit sensationalist, the list also includes accusers, witnesses, victims etc. Some are just weird and it's hard to tell whether it's just the random spelling. Others I just find strange because I expect to find them in my parents or grandparents generation and don't think of them as traditional. Others are just unsual or otherwise interesting.
Female:
Vasta
Sinah
Rathea
Awdly - hee hee
Loer - no higher
Alse
JanaFides
DorcasBernet
Disne - related to
Walt?
Fryswid
Marienie
Florendine
Thomasine – sometimes found as Thomazine which suggests it was commonly pronounced with a hard s.
JohannaJennet - Another one I’ve seen in Scottish records is Jonet.
ArabellaUrsula – Pretty common. It surprised me as I realised I thought of it as an outside name and would have assumed it was a more modern adoption, not a name traditionally used in England. Of course the btn entry explains why.
Ursley - maybe a pet form of
Ursula?
CicelyTibia - and her sister Femur?
LydiaMagdalen / Magdaline (same person)
BlanchJoyceDenise - all these last 3 I think of as 20thC names
HesterSybil / Sibil / Sibila
PhilisPenelopeAngelClemenceMercyPrudenceGunnora (14thC)
Male:
Fulk Clavel
KenelmHerculesLudowick
ConstantineReginald CuthbertGodfreyEdmundGilbertLeonardHumphreyMilesTobiasMorganFelixLionelAmosAbelOzias
RowlandBartholomewZachariahGamalielEphraimGreshamManly
Lion
Fortune
Japhery – presumably
Jeffrey but gender unspecified
This message was edited 12/8/2008, 3:48 PM