Introduction

The primary goal in any family history research is to try and determine where the family originated. Sometimes, one is lucky and can accomplish this goal by pursuing the original records – birth/baptism, marriage, death/burial, wills and probate, but more often than not records are either lost or so illegible that the researcher reaches a dead end.

Figure 1 - Compton Dando
ComptonDando

This happened to me when researching my Nurse lineage. I managed to trace the family origins with a high degree of confidence to the parish of Compton Dando in northern Somerset, the first reference in that parish being the baptism[1] of James Nurse, son of William and Sarah Nurse in 1735.[2]

A thorough review of the parish records for the parishes of north Somerset showed that the family likely moved to Compton Dando from the Chew Stoke[3]/Chew Magna[4]/Norton Malreward[5] area. 

The earliest reference in the parish of Chew Magna is the burial of Joane Nurse of Stoke in 1573[6]. However, due to the poor state of the original records as well as their incompleteness, these conclusions are quite tentative and my research into the Nurse line came to a grinding halt.

The next stage in determining a family’s origin is to carry out research on the origin of the surname, with the hope that it can be shown that the name must have originated from a single source. This is actually very rare, but in the case of Nurse we can develop a few possible scenarios.

So, what is the origin of the surname Nurse?

I will take two different approaches to this question.

  1. The first approach will be to study the etymology of the name, to determine if there is a unique source.
  2. The second approach will be a statistical geographical approach. Through the use of various records we can attempt to determine the geographic location of the surname.

There is a third approach that can be used to trace your paternal ancestry (which in effect is what tracing the history of your surname is) and that is to use DNA.  This type of research is still in its infancy but can be used to confirm that male descendants with a common surname have a common Ancestor.

In this article I will focus on my research into the Etymology of the Nurse surname. I will describe my research into the geographic distribution of the Nurse surname in a future article.

The Origin of Surnames

Contrary to popular belief very few English families can trace their surnames to the “Domesday Book”, and fewer still can go back even tentatively to the pre-Conquest Anglo-Saxon era. Mainly this is due to a lack of records, but it is also due to the fact that hereditary surnames were restricted to the great land owning families.

Most of these surnames were derived from the locality where the family had their chief residence. For example, amongst William I’s barons at Hastings were William de Warenne from Varennes near Dieppe and Ilbert de Laci from Lassy, south of Bayeux.

During the two centuries or so that followed the Conquest most major landowning families and many knights adopted hereditary surnames, especially if they lived in the south of England, most of these hereditary surnames being derived from the place of origin of the family.

One of the largest categories of surnames is that which is derived from personal names. Some of these surnames, such as Paul or Thomas, derive directly from the personal name of the father of the man, who was the first in that line to adopt a hereditary surname. Others have –s or –son added as a suffix to a personal name, e.g. Roberts or Johnson, and yet others are prefixed by the Norman Fitz-, the Gaelic Mac or Mc, or the Welsh ap or ab, all of which mean “son of”.

Another large group of surnames, which became popular amongst the lower classes, is derived from occupations or from an office, rank or status. By the beginning of the thirteenth century, the more common occupational surnames, such as Smith, Taylor or Wright were already numerous.

Etymology of the Surname Nurse

The surname Nurse is derived from the same origins as the related names Nursey, Nourse, Norrish, Nurrish, Nowers, Norreys, Norrie and Norris, with the last being the form most common in recent times. The earliest mention of the variant Nurse appears to be in the early 16th century.[7],[8] There appears to be four different origins for this family of names.[9],[10]

The first origin is derived from the Old French word "norreis" which means "northerner" or "northman". This version of the name was found all over the country but particularly in the Midlands and the South. Some examples are;

  • Robert Noreis, who lived in Hampshire in 1148,[9]
  • William Le Norreis who lived in Gloucestershire between 1163 and 1200,[9]
  • Robert Le Norais who lived in Yorkshire in 1170,[9]
  • Robert Le Norreis who witnessed a charter by Earl Gospatric to the Priory of Coldingham in Scotland in 1166,[11] and
  • William Norrensis[12] who witnessed a charter by Malcolm, Earl of Fife in 1228.[11]

A second related, but far less common derivation is derived from the Old English words "noro" (north) and "hus" (house) meaning someone who dwelt in the north house or someone who lived on the north side of the estate, e.g.

  • Adam de Northus who lived in Essex in 1206.[9]

The third origin of the name, which is again quite common, is from the Old French word "norice", or "nurice" and the Latin "nutrix"/"nutricis" meaning wet nurse or foster parent. Again this version of the name is widespread throughout the country. Examples of people with the name with this origin are:

  • John "Le Norreys" who was one of an inquisition to inquire if Walter Biset was seized in the manor of Ulvington, Scotland at his death in 1251,[11]
  • Richard Norreys of Berwickshire who rendered homage to the King in 1296,[11]
  • Robert Le Noris of Yorkshire in 1297,[9] Alice La Norisse in Essex in 1310,[9] and
  • John Norice in Kent in 1317.[9]

The last origin of this family of names is derived from a family that came from Normandy with William the Conqueror; de Noers (and its variations, de Noiers, de Nuers). It is this last variation that most closely resembles the name Nurse, requiring only one letter to be moved.

At least one soldier named "de Noers" came with William the Conqueror and is on the Roll of Battle Abbey, in the Domesday Book.[10] The actual derivation of this name seems to be “de Noyers” after the name of a place –“Noyers”- in Normandy. As discussed earlier, surnames were only just beginning to be used in the 11th and 12th centuries; most people were referred to as John from some town (de Noyers in Norman French) or John the Smith (blacksmith).

There are records from Normandy to support the view that the family had its origins there. Here are a few:

  • Gilbert de Noyers witnessed a charter of Duke Richard to Fontanelles in 1024 A.D.
  • Richard, Gerald, and Gervase de Noiers, 1180-95 in Normandy
  • Andomar and William Norensis, 1180-95 in Normandy

While there is no evidence to suggest any connection to my ancestors, it is interesting to look at some of the people through the ages who have carried the name Noers, Norreys, Norris or Nurse. In a future article I will tell the story of William de Noers, Steward of King William I (The Conqueror). It is possible that William de Noers was a descendant of Gilbert de Noyers, listed above, but we have no proof that this is the case.

 


Bibliography and Notes

[1] - Parish Register for the Parish of Compton Dando Somerset, 1652-1900. Microfilmed by the Church of Jesus Christ Of Latter-Day Saints, Film No. 1526553.

[2] - James Nurse was baptized on 15th June 1735.

[3] - Parish Register for the Parish of Chew Stoke, Somerset, 1663-1789. Microfiched by the Somerset Record Office, Taunton, Somerset.

[4] - Parish Register for the Parish of Chew Magna, Somerset, 1569-1812. Microfiched by the Somerset Record Office, Taunton, Somerset

[5] - Parish Register for the Parish of Norton Malreward, Somerset, 1666-1812. Microfiched by the Somerset Record Office, Taunton, Somerset.

[6] - Joane Nurse of Stoke was buried on 19 Nov 1573. At that time Chew Stoke was part of the parish of Chew Magna.

[7] - International Genealogical Index, Rev. Jan 1988, Gloucestershire County, Page 16,867..

[8] - Boyd's Marriage Index for Somerset, Society of Genalogists (www.englishorigins.com).

[9] - A Dictionary of British Surnames, P. H. Reaney, Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1958.

[10] - An Etymological Dictionary of Family and Christian Names, William Arthur, Shilds Blakeman and Co, 1857.

[11] - Norensis is the Latin variation of the name Noreis

[12] - Surnames of Scotland, George Black, New York Public Library, 1946.


Posted in: Genealogy  Tags: ,

This week I attended my first ASPInsiders Summit.  Thanks to Scott Hanselman, our Microsoft liaison and Scott Galloway, about 30 of the ASPInsiders descended on the Redmond campus for meetings with the ASP.NET team.  The goal of the meeting was to allow the team to present some of their plans for the next release of ASP.NET and for us to provide some feedback.  As I am covered by an NDA I cannot reveal the substance of any of those discussions - sorry .

During one presentation on the MVC Framework, we got bogged down in a debate about the differences between MVC and WebForms, and TDD (Test Driven Development).  One Insider said - "My customers won't pay for me to spend the effort on Test Driven Development so MVC does nothing for me". 

Wait a minute, I thought, there's more to MVC than TDD, and it occurred to me that if an ASPInsider with our contacts with the team and our involvement in the ASP.NET Community feels this way, what does that mean for the ASP.NET Community at large?

ASP.NET MVC is a whole new way of doing web development for ASP.NET developers.  While it allows for full testability it does not require it, and while it supports TDD it certainly doesn't require developers to use that development method.  The ASP.NET MVC Framework being developed provides developers with a new and flexible way to build Web Applications.

And to dispel another myth - MVC does not replace WebForms - the tried and true method of developing ASP.NET Web Applications is here to stay.

Unfortunately, it seems to me, that the Microsoft message is putting too much focus on TDD, rather than all the benefits of MVC - Separation of Concerns, Control over HTML, Testability (not just TDD) and others. 

So before this product goes to RTM - lets get the message right


Posted in: ASP.NET  Tags: , ,

One of the more ironic things that happened after I moved to Canada was that I took up an interest in my Family Tree. Of course, it is a lot easier to do research when one is living in the country in which most of the records exist. However, in this modern age of microfilms, microfiche and computer databases it is possible, albeit a little harder to carry out this kind of research from 5,000 miles away.

I suppose I have always had a keen interest in history, and when my parents came over to visit us for our son Andrew's baptism in 1986, my father brought over a copy of the Nurse Family Tree, which he had prepared from his father's (my grandfather William Richmond Nurse) notes. At about the same time a good friend of ours, Jim Fraser, told me that the Mormon Church had a huge library of genealogical information since tracing one's ancestry is a tenet of their faith. Since then I have started to expand on the information that Dad had compiled, first using the Public and University Libraries, and more recently using the facilities of the Mormon Church Family History Center in Burnaby, BC.

The Public Libraries in Vancouver and Victoria contain a number of Biographical Dictionaries and Encyclopedias, and that is where I had my first success, finding a reference to John Taylor (who I believe to be my great-great-great-great-great-grandfather), and his Gordon and Luther ancestry. This reference was in a book entitled “Burkes Commoners of Great Britain”, published in 1840 by the same publishers who publish “Burke's Peerage”. This Book gave a genealogy of over two hundred of the most famous commoners of their generation. It has since been renamed “Burke's Landed Gentry”, and is republished every few years. However, the Taylor family history only appears in this edition (which was the first) and the second edition, although there are references to the Taylor family in Burke's Peerage as the family was related by marriage to the Fane family (Earl's of Westmoreland).

Burke's Commoners briefly mentions that John Taylor was a painter of some repute. More recently, in a Dictionary of Painters, which I found at the University of British Columbia Library, I discovered a further reference to a biography of John Taylor, published in an Art History Journal, and these two references basically form the jumping off point for my research on the Taylor family.

The Mormon Church have microfilmed or microfiched a lot of the original birth and marriage registers (both parish and civil) and other records (such as censuses, wills, and other assorted records), which are held in National and County Archives in England. However, some of the records are incomplete. Primarily this is because the filming program is an ongoing process and has not yet been completed, but it is also due to the fact that some are reluctant to grant them permission to do the filming. Another limitation to the Mormon records is that they do not have an interest in burial records (for theological reasons), and so it is a low priority for the filming teams. Unfortunately, burial records can provide a lot of useful information in tracing ancestors.

However, one of the most important contributions of the Mormon Church to family history research is the creation of the International Genealogical Index (IGI). This Index is a compilation of millions of birth, marriage and burial records, submitted to the Church by thousands of family history researchers. While originally produced on microfiche, the index has been published on CD-ROM and more recently has been placed online on the Church’s new Family History Research website (www.familysearch.org).

Nowadays the Internet is a huge resource for Genealogy Researchers as more and more records are placed online.  This can be shown by the popularity by sites like Ancestry (www.ancestry.com) and Genes Reunited (www.genesreunited.co.uk).


Posted in: Genealogy  Tags: ,

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The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in anyway.

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