Bewick (surname): Difference between revisions
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The coat of arms of the Bewickes of [[Newcastle upon Tyne]], which are displayed on several plaques by various family members in the [[Newcastle Cathedral|Cathedral Church of St. Nicholas]], show a white shield with five red diamond-shaped [[lozenge]]s, which have on each a white star, that run horizontal between three black bear's heads muzzled white and torn jaggedly at the neck, with two atop and one beneath the row of lozenges. The [[Crest (heraldry)|crest]] is a white goat's head jaggedly torn off at the neck that wears a collar of a [[mural crown]]. In heraldic terms, the coat of arms could be described as, ''Argent five lozenges conjoined in fess gules each charged with a mullet of the field between three [[bear]]s' heads [[erasure (heraldry)|erased]] [[sable]] muzzled [[argent]]'', and the crest as, ''A goat's head erased argent and gorged with a [[mural coronet]] [[gules]]''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sandmartyn.freeserve.co.uk/Heraldry/roll01/lhsnc.html|title=The Lost and Hidden Heraldry of St. Nicholas Cathedral, Newcastle upon Tyne|publisher=The Sandmartyn Pages|accessdate=26 October 2009}}</ref> |
The coat of arms of the Bewickes of [[Newcastle upon Tyne]], which are displayed on several plaques by various family members in the [[Newcastle Cathedral|Cathedral Church of St. Nicholas]], show a white shield with five red diamond-shaped [[lozenge]]s, which have on each a white star, that run horizontal between three black bear's heads muzzled white and torn jaggedly at the neck, with two atop and one beneath the row of lozenges. The [[Crest (heraldry)|crest]] is a white goat's head jaggedly torn off at the neck that wears a collar of a [[mural crown]]. In heraldic terms, the coat of arms could be described as, ''Argent five lozenges conjoined in fess gules each charged with a mullet of the field between three [[bear]]s' heads [[erasure (heraldry)|erased]] [[sable]] muzzled [[argent]]'', and the crest as, ''A goat's head erased argent and gorged with a [[mural coronet]] [[gules]]''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sandmartyn.freeserve.co.uk/Heraldry/roll01/lhsnc.html|title=The Lost and Hidden Heraldry of St. Nicholas Cathedral, Newcastle upon Tyne|publisher=The Sandmartyn Pages|accessdate=26 October 2009}}</ref> |
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The [[logo]] used on the Buick automobile is said to be derived from the ancient Buik coat of arms, as located in an 1851 edition of ''Burke's General Armory'' during the 1930s by [[General Motors]] researcher Ralph Pew. The coat of arms was described as "a red shield with a checkered silver and azure (blue) diagonal line running from the upper left corner to lower right, an antlered deer head with a jagged neckline in the upper right corner of the shield and a gold cross in the lower left corner. The cross had a hole in the center with the red of the shield showing through." A search today of ''Burke's General Armory'' shows no such entry for Buik, nor for Buick, so if the article existed in an 1851 edition, the editor's have subsequently removed it.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cartype.com/page.cfm?id=270&alph=ALL|title=Buick|publisher=Cartype|accessdate=26 October 2009}}</ref> |
The [[logo]] used on the Buick automobile is said to be derived from the ancient Buik coat of arms, as located in an 1851 edition of ''Burke's General Armory'' during the 1930s by [[General Motors]] researcher Ralph Pew. The coat of arms was described as "a red shield with a checkered silver and azure (blue) diagonal line running from the upper left corner to lower right, an antlered deer head with a jagged neckline in the upper right corner of the shield and a gold cross in the lower left corner. The cross had a hole in the center with the red of the shield showing through." A search today of ''Burke's General Armory'' shows no such entry for Buik, nor for Buick, so if the article existed in an 1851 edition, the editor's have subsequently removed it.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cartype.com/page.cfm?id=270&alph=ALL|title=Buick|publisher=Cartype|accessdate=26 October 2009|deadurl=yes|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20091220001454/http://www.cartype.com/page.cfm?id=270&alph=ALL|archivedate=20 December 2009|df=}}</ref> |
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==Notable persons== |
==Notable persons== |
Revision as of 07:19, 19 July 2017
Pronunciation | /ˈbjuː.ɪk/ |
---|---|
Language(s) | English |
Origin | |
Meaning | Derived from two villages named Bewick. |
Region of origin | Northern England |
Other names | |
Related names | Buick, Buik, Bewicke and Bewike |
The surname Bewick, alternately found as Buick, Buik, Bewicke, Bewike and Buicke,[1] is ultimately of English origin, but later made its way to Scotland and came to prominence in the person of David Dunbar Buick, the Angus-born, Scottish American founder of the Buick Motor Company.
Origins
Certain surnames, with Bewick being an example of this, are derived from the name of a small community. It is believed smaller towns and villages were taken as surnames by those families migrating from these rural communities to the larger cities, and the need for new arrivals to choose a defining surname.
There are two historic villages in England by the name Bewick, one is found in Yorkshire and the other is found in Northumberland. The Bewick of Northumberland is today a civil parish divided into the hamlet of New Bewick and the village of Old Bewick.
Coat of arms
It is a common misconception that there is one coat of arms associated to everyone of a common surname, when, in fact, a coat of arms is property passed through direct lineage.[2] This means that there are numerous families of Buick, perhaps under various spellings, that are related, but because they are not the direct descendants of a Buick that owned an armorial device do not have rights or claims to any arms themselves.
The coat of arms of the Bewickes of Newcastle upon Tyne, which are displayed on several plaques by various family members in the Cathedral Church of St. Nicholas, show a white shield with five red diamond-shaped lozenges, which have on each a white star, that run horizontal between three black bear's heads muzzled white and torn jaggedly at the neck, with two atop and one beneath the row of lozenges. The crest is a white goat's head jaggedly torn off at the neck that wears a collar of a mural crown. In heraldic terms, the coat of arms could be described as, Argent five lozenges conjoined in fess gules each charged with a mullet of the field between three bears' heads erased sable muzzled argent, and the crest as, A goat's head erased argent and gorged with a mural coronet gules.[3]
The logo used on the Buick automobile is said to be derived from the ancient Buik coat of arms, as located in an 1851 edition of Burke's General Armory during the 1930s by General Motors researcher Ralph Pew. The coat of arms was described as "a red shield with a checkered silver and azure (blue) diagonal line running from the upper left corner to lower right, an antlered deer head with a jagged neckline in the upper right corner of the shield and a gold cross in the lower left corner. The cross had a hole in the center with the red of the shield showing through." A search today of Burke's General Armory shows no such entry for Buik, nor for Buick, so if the article existed in an 1851 edition, the editor's have subsequently removed it.[4]
Notable persons
- Bewick Bridge (1767–1833), English vicar and mathematical author
- Darren Bewick (born 1967), AFL footballer
- David Buick (1854–1929), New Zealand politician
- David Dunbar Buick (1848–1918), inventor of the OHV engine and founder of the Buick Motor Company
- Glen Buick (born c. 1938), Canadian diplomat
- Pauline Bewick (born 1935), Irish artist
- Rohan Bewick (born 1989), AFL footballer for the Brisbane Lions
- Thomas Bewick (1753–1828), English wood engraver and ornithologist
- William Bewick (1795–1866), English portrait painter
- William Buick (born 1988), British jockey
- William Christie Buik (1824–1903), politician and Mayor of Adelaide, South Australia
See also
- Bewick, Northumberland, a parish in England containing the hamlets of New Bewick and Old Bewick
- Buick Motor Company, automobile marque founded by David Buick and owned by the General Motors Company
- Buick City, Flint, Michigan, automobile manufacturing complex that closed in 1999
- Buick Invitational, a PGA Tour professional golf tournament
- Bewick's swan (Cygnus bewickii), a species of tundra swan
- Bewick's wren (Thryomanes bewickii), a wren native to North America
External links
- "Distribution of the surname Buick in Great Britain, 1881". Spatial Literacy.
- "Distribution of the surname Buick in Great Britain, 1998". Spatial Literacy.
References
- ^ "Millstreet website "Buicke" search results". Millstreet town website. Retrieved 19 July 2015.
- ^ "College of Arms-Frequently Asked Questions". College of Arms. Retrieved 26 October 2009.
- ^ "The Lost and Hidden Heraldry of St. Nicholas Cathedral, Newcastle upon Tyne". The Sandmartyn Pages. Retrieved 26 October 2009.
- ^ "Buick". Cartype. Archived from the original on 20 December 2009. Retrieved 26 October 2009.
{{cite web}}
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- Black, George F. The Surnames of Scotland.
- Reaney, P.H. A Dictionary of British Surnames.
- Burke's General Armory.