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Scotland Picts
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I have just begun to trace my family Surname (Baney); I have discovered that it has Pictish origins. I can find information on the internet about the Picts, but I was wondering if anyone had any source suggestions that are not on the internet.
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Really? Reaney & Wilson's Dictionary of English Surnames (which is a standard reference work) gives the first recorded incidence of the name as John & William Bani, mentioned in the Rotuli Hundredorum for Buckinghamshire in 1279. The same source also mentions Agnes & Alice Bonye, with Reaney & Wilson linking all of the following surnames to the Old English word (bãn) for 'bones' (which was probably a nickname):
Baney, Boney, Bones, Bain, Baine, Baines, Bains, Baynes, Bayns.
No Picts there!
Really? Reaney & Wilson's Dictionary of English Surnames (which is a standard reference work) gives the first recorded incidence of the name as John & William Bani, mentioned in the Rotuli Hundredorum for Buckinghamshire in 1279. The same source also mentions Agnes & Alice Bonye, with Reaney & Wilson linking all of the following surnames to the Old English word (bãn) for 'bones' (which was probably a nickname):
Baney, Boney, Bones, Bain, Baine, Baines, Bains, Baynes, Bayns.
No Picts there!
Names and words can have Pictish origins but you're unlikely to get much further. Romans and Anglo-Saxons destroyed Scottish written history.
Incidentally, Cruithne is probably more accurate than Pictish.
Check out the Pictish symbol stones. There are about 150 remaining and there's nothing like them elsewhere in Europe.
Incidentally, Cruithne is probably more accurate than Pictish.
Check out the Pictish symbol stones. There are about 150 remaining and there's nothing like them elsewhere in Europe.