Russell (surname) explained

Russell
Meaning:red, or a toponymic
Region:France, Ireland, Scotland, England
Language:Anglo-Norman
Variant:Rosel; Rousel; Russel; Rossell; Roussel;
Footnotes:Frequency comparisons:[1]

Russell, also Rosel, Rousel, Roussel, Russel or Rossell. The origin of the name has historically been subject to disagreement, with two distinct origins proposed. Early genealogists traced the Russel/Russell family of Kingston Russel from Anglo-Norman landholders bearing the toponymic surname 'de Rosel' or 'du Rozel', deriving from Rosel, Calvados, Normandy (not, as has also been claimed, Le Rozel, Manche).[2] However, J. Horace Round observed that these flawed pedigrees erroneously linked toponymic-bearing men with unrelated men who instead bore the Anglo-Norman nickname rus[s]el (represented in contemporary Latin documents as Rosellus), given to men with red hair. This nickname was a diminutive of the Norman-French rus (Old French ros, Modern French roux[3]), meaning 'red', and was also an archaic name for the red fox,[4] which in turn borrowed from Old Norse rossel, "red-haired", from Old Norse ros "red hair color" and the suffix -el. Round concluded "there is no reason to suppose that the surname Russell was territorial at all," and surname dictionaries have preferred to derive the surname from the nickname. Dictionaries also state that the English name Rufus originally meant "red haired".[5]

People with surname Russell include:

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See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Russell Surname Meaning and Geographic Distribution . forebears.co.uk . 19 January 2014.
  2. [J. Horace Round]
  3. https://www.cnrtl.fr/etymologie/roux "roux, rousse"
  4. Henry Harrison, Surnames of the United Kingdom: A Concise Etymological Dictionary, London: The Moreland Press, 1918, vol. 2, p. 130.
  5. [Patrick Hanks]