[Ger-Poland-Volhynia] Prussian Names
Ed
esonnenburg at porchlight.ca
Fri Apr 18 15:11:05 PDT 2003
The German way to say August is more like when someone punches you in the
nose
OWWWGOOST
----- Original Message -----
From: "Gary Warner" <gary at warnerengineering.com>
To: "Magton" <mag_ton at yahoo.com>; <ger-poland-volhynia at eclipse.sggee.org>
Sent: April 18, 2003 3:15 PM
Subject: Re: [Ger-Poland-Volhynia] Prussian Names
> To all,
>
> From the link on the SGGEE web site to a site called Behind the Name, at
> http://www.behindthename.com/
>
> AUGUST (1) m German, Polish
> German and Polish form of AUGUSTUS
>
> AUGUST (2) m English
> Pronounced: AW-gust
> Means simply "August" from the name of the month, which was
> originally named for the Roman emperor Augustus.
>
> AUGUSTUS m Ancient Roman
> Pronounced: aw-GUS-tus
> Means "great" or "venerable", derived from Latin augere "to
> increase". Augustus was the title given to Octavian, the first
> Roman emperor. He was the adopted son of Julius Caesar who rose
> to power through a combination of military skill and political
> prowess. This was also the name of three kings of Poland.
>
> EUPHROSYNE f Greek Mythology
> Means "mirth, merriment" in Greek. She was one of the three
> Graces (Charites) in Greek mythology.
>
> Gary Warner
> SGGEE
>
> At 07:26 AM 4/18/2003, Magton wrote:
>
> "The choice of given names by parents was influenced
> by religious,
> ethnic and cultural background of the family. Luise
> (Louisa) was the
> most popular Prussian queen
> Even though families now lived in Russian Poland they
> chose to quietly
> show their heart allegiance to the Prussian king.
> Along with Luise, the
> given names Friedrich and Wilhelm were popular. I
> bear the name "Otto"
> with a Saxon twang, and my father Alexander, the given
> name of the
> Czar. There are also Elizabeths in the family usually
> with familiar
> Augusts and Johanns"
>
> Does the male name AUGUST have particular Prussian
> overtones? Can anyone shed some light on a female
> name like EUPHROSINA ??(spelled EUFROZYNA in the
> Polishj writing from German Lutheran records ) I am
> not sure what the German spelling of that name would
> be ? I know it's an ancient , isoteric kind of Saint -
> name . Would German Lutherans have Saint names for
> their children - or purely ethnic German or cultural
> and political allegiance types of names?
>
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