Pueyrredón family explained

Pueyrredón is a French surname. It originated in the 13th century. Initial variants were Puyredón, Puiredón, Puecheredón and Puitredón.

Etymology

The name comes from "Podium Rotundum". "Puy" ("podium" in Latin) means mountain or hill, and "redón" means round. So, Pueyrredón" becomes "rounded hill". It was used at the Languedoc to name "puy" (podium) any lonely mountain. Such structures were strategically useful for as castle sites, many royal family names included "Puy". Neither the family nor their contemporaries wrote the surname with an acute accent on the o, as it is a French surname.[1] The ordinance 6324 of the General Pueyrredón Partido rules that the surname has no stress mark, and that mentions of it should not include it.[2]

History

The family was started by Juan Martín de Pueyrredón, born in 1736 in Issor, France. He moved to Buenos Aires in 1764 and married Rita O´Doghan, daughter of Irish immigrants. They had 8 children, such as Juan Martín de Pueyrredón, who became Supreme Director of the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata. Juana was the most prolific: she married Anselmo Sáenz Valiente and had 14 children, starting the largest branch of the family, with 7284 descendants as of 2000.[1]

Notables

Bibliography

. Grandes protagonistas de la historia argentina: Juan Martín de Pueyrredón. Félix Luna. 1999. Editorial Planeta. Buenos Aires. Spanish. 950-49-0469-6.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Los Pueyrredon preparan un encuentro de 18.000 parientes. The Pueyrredon prepare a meeting of 18,000 relatives. Spanish. Jorge Rouillon. October 2, 2000. La Nación. May 22, 2024.
  2. Web site: Pueyrredon va sin acento, la Ordenanza Nº 6324 de la Municipalidad del Partido de General Pueyrredon (Mar del Plata). Pueyrredon goes with no stress mark, ordinance Nº 6324 of the General Pueyrredon Partido (Mar del Plata). Spanish. Pueyrredon. May 22, 2024.