Crosswords0 min ago
Toachim, anyone?
11 Answers
Thanks to the varios Census,Free BMD etc pages,I have discovered an ancestor called:~
Toachim Brathering (some name eh?)
Can anyone tell me if Toachim is a Jewish firdt name?
Toachim Brathering (some name eh?)
Can anyone tell me if Toachim is a Jewish firdt name?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Mr Veritas. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.you should look at the Anglo-German FHS website.
http://www.agfhs.org.uk/
I havn;t been a member for 15 years, before computer indexing went big! Bet they have lots of info now.
I havn;'t found much on the name at all at the moment
http://www.agfhs.org.uk/
I havn;t been a member for 15 years, before computer indexing went big! Bet they have lots of info now.
I havn;'t found much on the name at all at the moment
I don't want to rain on your parade, but it couldn't be a misprint/misreading of JOACHIM could it ?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joachim_(disambig uation)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joachim_(disambig uation)
I've tried wading through page after page of Google hits for 'Toachim'. (Yes, I know it's crude but it can quite often be effective).
The only references to 'Toachim' as a forename (rather than as a surname) seem to be almost exclusively German. Perhaps the name is/was a German variation on 'Joachim' which is, of course, a Jewish name but which finds its way into Christianity through the possibility of it being the name of Christ's grandfather. (Maternal, for obvious reasons!):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joachim
Googling 'Brathering' immediately throws up hits showing it to be German for fried herring. Since the English surname 'Herring' is derived from someone being a dealer in herring, it doesn't seem unreasonable to suspect that 'Brathering' has similar roots as a German surname. ('Brathering' does not appear in Reaney & Wilson's 'A Dictionary of English Surnames', which adds further credence to the suggestion that it has foreign origins).
So a Jewish link might seem to be tenuous at best, but a German one seems to be extremely likely.
Chris
The only references to 'Toachim' as a forename (rather than as a surname) seem to be almost exclusively German. Perhaps the name is/was a German variation on 'Joachim' which is, of course, a Jewish name but which finds its way into Christianity through the possibility of it being the name of Christ's grandfather. (Maternal, for obvious reasons!):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joachim
Googling 'Brathering' immediately throws up hits showing it to be German for fried herring. Since the English surname 'Herring' is derived from someone being a dealer in herring, it doesn't seem unreasonable to suspect that 'Brathering' has similar roots as a German surname. ('Brathering' does not appear in Reaney & Wilson's 'A Dictionary of English Surnames', which adds further credence to the suggestion that it has foreign origins).
So a Jewish link might seem to be tenuous at best, but a German one seems to be extremely likely.
Chris
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