Fitch (surname) explained

Fitch
Pronunciation:Fitch
Region:England
Origin:Old French
Variant:Fytche, Ffytche, Fitche, Fitcher, Fittje, and Fitchy
Footnotes:[1]

Fitch is a family name of Old French origin. Like most ancient surnames, there are a number of possible origins to the name. It may originate from the Old French word fissell meaning "an iron-pointed implement". It may also derive from William de Gernon who inherited the barony of Stansted Mountfitchet in Essex, England and took the surname "de Montifitchet". His descendants eventually shortened the name first to "Fitche" and then to "Fitch".[2]

Related names include Fitchet, Fitchell, Fitchen and Fitchett, as well as others. Earliest records show the name and derivatives occurring from the 12th century onwards. It may also have been used as a personal name.

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Notes and References

  1. Book: P. H. Reaney. A Dictionary of English Surnames. 30 October 2012. 10 October 1991. Taylor & Francis. 978-0-415-05737-0. 1172.
  2. Book: Richard Coleman Witters. Ancestral Roots and Descendants of Charles Robert Looney and LaVanchie Margaret Cool and the Families of Ackley, Bradford, Burbank, Cool, Crow, Dwight, Fitch, Flint, Goodwin, Granger, Hoar, Kuhl, Looney, Mason, Partridge, Peck, Wark, and Whiting. 30 October 2012. 17 December 2009. Xlibris Corporation. 978-1-4415-2936-7. 135–. https://web.archive.org/web/20140627000705/http://books.google.com/books?id=cNHNOfL3ra4C&pg=PA135. 27 June 2014. live.