Re: 17th century English criminal's names!
in reply to a message by Dot
I never thought of Ursley like that, yes you're probably right. I find it quite hard to say, maybe that's why the full Ursula was more popular. And thanks for the info on Frideswide. I found it interesting she's really the only one with a very traditional old English name in the 17thC.According to wiki, Gunnora was the consort and wife of Richard I of Normandy and was of Danish ancestry, so maybe the name is related to the male name Gunnar?
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17th century English criminal's names!  ·  Lethe  ·  12/8/2008, 3:16 PM
Re: 17th century English criminal's names!  ·  Jonquil  ·  12/9/2008, 5:10 AM
Re: 17th century English criminal's names!  ·  Dot  ·  12/8/2008, 7:05 PM
Re: 17th century English criminal's names!  ·  Lethe  ·  12/9/2008, 2:42 AM
Re: 17th century English criminal's names!  ·  Dot  ·  12/9/2008, 5:01 AM
Re: 17th century English criminal's names!  ·  Melania  ·  12/8/2008, 5:45 PM
Re: 17th century English criminal's names!  ·  number1212  ·  12/8/2008, 4:03 PM
Re: 17th century English criminal's names!  ·  Sabrina Fair  ·  12/8/2008, 3:47 PM
Ancestry.com's entry program is great for names too (nt)  ·  LMS  ·  12/8/2008, 3:46 PM
Re: 17th century English criminal's names!  ·  Andromache  ·  12/8/2008, 3:46 PM
Re: 17th century English criminal's names!  ·  mafiosa  ·  12/8/2008, 3:26 PM