Post
by Liz Turner » Thu Aug 03, 2006 7:51 pm
Dear Emanday
I've been checking this post to see if anyone had answered. Since you've not had a reply, here's my tuppence worth - which, of course, may be way off base
I would not think that Solomon was necessarily a Jewish name. If your family were from possibly Scottish Presbyterian stock they could well have been "planted" in Ireland in earlier years. A lot of families kept to traditional names from the Bible so that might explain the type of names you've come across. I'm also not sure that there would be much in the way of a Jewish community in Ireland. They tended to stick together, and to be in large towns/cities.
Although you often hear people talk about the traditional Scottish naming pattern, it wasn't set in stone. Families kept to the same names, with the occasional deviation if someone close to the family had perhaps died. (I've found in my own families that the names do repeat all the time, but not in a strict order).
Again, people did not have the same need back in those days to protect and confirm their identities in the way we have to do today. In fact, I believe that even now in Scotland you can call yourself by any name you like so long as there is no intention to defraud. (Now could I be Kylie, I wonder??).
Let us know how you get on and I hope someone else might pick this up.
Liz
Fife: Nicolson, Cornfoot, Walker, Gibson, Balsillie, Galt, Elder
NE Scot: Nicolson, Lindsay, Haliburton, Ross
Edin & Central: Nicolson, Blaikie, Stevenson, Ross, Hotchkiss, Suttie, Christie, Clelland, Gray, Purvis, Lang, Dickson
Ross & Cromarty: Ross