[Surname] Re: Freeman
in reply to a message by Alix
wow I was just asking the same Question Today ? wow.... Please advise me or post on the message board when you find out too please , and oh if it is Jewish , does it mean to be a
( Free Man ? ) I was thinking about changing my name ( SURNAME ) To "Freeman" .
Thanks & Blessings ,
Yolie
NYC
( Free Man ? ) I was thinking about changing my name ( SURNAME ) To "Freeman" .
Thanks & Blessings ,
Yolie
NYC
Replies
It can be Jewish, but it's a an English surname from way back.
My theory of Freeman as a Jewish surname is that it was originally Friedmann which became Freeman in the English-speaking world. Friedmann literally means "peace-man", which itself may be a stand-in for the Hebrew Shalom, which was a male personal name meaning (all together!) "peace". However, there is also a Jewish surname Frei, or Frey, which means "free", so, what price theories?
As an English surname Freeman meant what it says, the bearer was a free man and not a serf. Franklin is another surname with the same meaning.
Just to complicate matters the Irish took a liking to the name and used it as an English language version of Ó Saoraidhe (also Seery) and Mac an tsaor (also Macateer, Macintyre). Note that both names incorporate the word saor, which is Irish for "free".
I bet you wish you'd never asked.
My theory of Freeman as a Jewish surname is that it was originally Friedmann which became Freeman in the English-speaking world. Friedmann literally means "peace-man", which itself may be a stand-in for the Hebrew Shalom, which was a male personal name meaning (all together!) "peace". However, there is also a Jewish surname Frei, or Frey, which means "free", so, what price theories?
As an English surname Freeman meant what it says, the bearer was a free man and not a serf. Franklin is another surname with the same meaning.
Just to complicate matters the Irish took a liking to the name and used it as an English language version of Ó Saoraidhe (also Seery) and Mac an tsaor (also Macateer, Macintyre). Note that both names incorporate the word saor, which is Irish for "free".
I bet you wish you'd never asked.
I forgot to mention, Ashkenazi.