Jump to content

Martin (name): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
→‎Born after 1900: add Mike Martin (baseball coach)
→‎Born after 1950: added Trayvon Martin
Line 245: Line 245:
* [[Todd Martin]] (born 1970), American former tennis player
* [[Todd Martin]] (born 1970), American former tennis player
* [[Tony Martin (comedian)]] (born 1964), Australian comedian
* [[Tony Martin (comedian)]] (born 1964), Australian comedian
* [[Trayvon Martin]] (1995-2012), high school student


===Living with unknown birth year===
===Living with unknown birth year===

Revision as of 18:08, 14 July 2013

Martin may either be a surname or given name.

Martin
GenderMale
Origin
Word/nameEnglish,
Latin
MeaningSettlement by a lake English,
Of Mars,
Warlike Latin
Other names
Related namesMartyn, Marta, Martina

Martin is a common given and family name in most European languages. In some languages, and as a given name, it comes from the Latin name Martinus, which is a late derived form of the name of the Roman god Mars, the protective godhead of the Latins (and therefore the god of warring).[1] The meaning is usually rendered in reference to the god as "of Mars", or "of war/warlike" ("martial").

It has remained a popular given name in Christian times, in honor of the Catholic saint Martin of Tours; it is also the most common French surname. One well-known Irish family are called Martyn. Along with its historic Catholic popularity, it has also been popular among Protestants due to Martin Luther. In addition, African American children are often given the name in honor of Martin Luther King, Jr.. Additionally, many Black Americans have the name Martin as a family name.

Martin is also an Anglicized surname for a much older, ancient proto-Celtic tribe, who arrived in Ireland roughly 2000 years ago. The Mairtine are noted in the Book of Munster and other historical documents. The names, though recently similar, are disassociated with either Martin de Tours, or Martin de Porres.

Etymology of the surname

St Martin of Tours, the patron saint of soldiers, leaves the life of chivalry and renounces the army. St Martin is one of the most familiar and recognizable Roman Catholic saints.

England

The English surname of Martin is a variation of the habitational one Marton, from any of several places (principally in Hampshire, Lincolnshire, and Worcestershire, named in Old English as "settlement by a lake", from mere or mær "pool", "lake" + tun "settlement") or as "settlement by a boundary" (from (ge)mære "boundary" + tun "settlement") called firstly Marton and after Martin.[citation needed]

France

With over 230,000 people holding the surname Martin in France, it is the most common French surname.[2] The origins of its frequency can be attributed to Saint Martin of Tours, who was the most popular French saint, but the reason is not clear.[3]

Martin was never a common given name (Christian name) in the Middle Ages, like Bernard or Thomas (which were later officialized and became common surnames, nowadays ranking second and third respectively). Onomastics have tried to find other reasons for Martin's popularity, by examining, for example, the repartition of place names, but this explanation also lacks empirical support.[3]

It can be a late surname connected with children of orphanages, like Alexandre, which was never a common first name in the Middle Ages but now appears quite frequently as a surname. Martin can represent charity towards orphans.

Spain

Martín, with a tilde on the “i” and pronounced [mar 'tin] (mar-teen) is a pretty common given name and it's among the most common surnames in Spain. Its Catalan variant is Martí and in Galician is Martiño. Jewish families in medieval Spain (Sephardic) Jews who remained in Spain and agreed to accept Christianity were asked to change their surnames. One of the names taken up by these Jewish conversos (originally known in Spain as Marranos, but preferred term is 'anusim' which is Hebrew for "forced") was “Martí”. Sephardic Jews also used Martin or Martinez, as a variation from the Hebrew name Mordecai.[4]

Ireland

See The Mairtine for early Irish beginnings. Later surname variations include Mac Giolla Mhártain, Ó Maol Mhartain, Ó Martain, Ó Máirtín, Mac Máirtín, Mac Máel Martain and were probably distantly related from a Keltoid root stock. Recent DNA evidence has this group in Ireland for 3000 years and aligning with the Ulaidh, Errain, and Eóghanacht in Munster and later in the DalRiata kinship groups.

Echmílid mac Máel Martain was Bishop of Down to 1202. Giolla Ernain Ó Martain, who died in 1218, was an Irish poet and Chief Ollam of Ireland. Fearghal Ó Martain, O.E.S.A., was Bishop of Killala from 1425 to 1432.

After the Norman invasion of Ireland in 1169, numerous new, unrelated bearers of the name from Britain and France, settled in Ireland.

The most well-known Norman family in County Galway were the Martyn family, who were counted among The 13 Tribes of Galway.

Scotland

There are several groups of Martins or Macmartins in Scotland. The MacMartins of Letterfinlay appear to have allied themselves to the Clan Cameron in the late 14th century, and finally merged with the Camerons after the Battle of Lochaber in 1429. The Martins in Skye are traditionally associated with Clan Donald, and the Lothians were home to a powerful 'de St Martin' family from the 12th century. In Ireland there are at least three major families bearing the name "Martin";[5] one being of foreign origin and the latter two, indigenous Irish clans. There are many mottos and arms registered by various Martins throughout the British Isles. The motto of Abraham Martin of Cleveragh and Bloomfield, County Sligo, was "Hinc Fortior et Clarior", which translates as: "... hence stronger and more illustrious". This same motto was registered by another Martin in Edinburgh, 1672.[6][7]

Wales

An Anglo-Norman knight named Robert fitz Martin, born in the late 11th century, settled in England's West Country, on lands inherited from a grandfather, and later participated in the invasions of Wales, where he was awarded the barony of Cemais, located between Fishguard and Cardigan. Robert fitz Martin established the caput of his barony at Nanhyfer or Nevern. Robert's son William fitz Robert fitz Martin (born c. 1155) inherited the family's property and re-established family control over Cemais, which had been lost to the Welsh. The senior line became extinct in 1326, but cadet lines still flourish in England, Wales, Ireland and elsewhere.

United States

Martin was the sixteenth most frequently reported surname in the 1990 United States Census, accounting for 0.27% of the population.[citation needed]

Hungary

Marton, the Hungarian form of the name, is commonly used as both a first name and surname.

Persons with the surname

Notable people sharing the surname "Martin" include:

Born before 1600

Born after 1600

Born after 1700

Born after 1800

Born after 1900

Born after 1950

Living with unknown birth year

Unknown living or dead with unknown birth year

Derived surnames

They generally mean "descendant of Martin".

Given name

Those people who are known primarily by the name "Martin" are listed below. Other notable people sharing this given name can be found through consulting all pages that begin with the prefix "Martin".

First name

Middle name

See also

References

  1. ^ Albert Dauzat, Dictionnaire étymologique des noms de famille et prénoms de France, Larousse, Paris 1980. p. 420. New completed edition by Marie-Thérèse Morlet.
  2. ^ linternaute.com (French)
  3. ^ a b Marianne Mulon, Origine et histoire des noms de famille. Essais d'anthroponymie, éditions errance 2002. p 137–138 : D'où viennent donc tous ces Martin (Where do all these Martins come from?).
  4. ^ Nelly Weiss. The Origin of Jewish Family Names. p. 216 Published by Lang, Peter Publishing, Incorporated. 2002.
  5. ^ http://www.goireland.com/genealogy/family.htm?FamilyId=234
  6. ^ John Peter Elven (1864), The book of family crests, Henry Washbourne, p. 71
  7. ^ Bernard Burke (1864), The general armory of England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales, Harrison & sons, pp. 663–664