[Ger-Poland-Volhynia] Name translations
Günther Böhm
GHBoehm at ish.de
Wed Oct 11 03:10:58 PDT 2006
Otto schrieb:
>No Richard,
>[...]
>Your surname has nothing to do with beans.
>Kidney or fava, red bean, purple royalty, or whatever. . .
>and probably never did.
>The German spelling of of 'bean' = 'bohne', the plural of bean is
>'bohnen'.
>Bohnsack=beanbag.
>[the old Prussian village of 'Bohnsack' is today known as
>'Sobieszewo' and a going concern on the Baltic coast a stone's throw
>east of Gdansk.]
>[...]
>What is a Boehn?
>Perhaps Günther Böhm can enlighten us. . .?
>Is it a variation of 'Böhm-Boehm'? Boehm-ert ... ?
>Boehm'ert-pronounced Baim'ert. The ai is the same sound as in 'air'.
>
Hello Richard & Otto,
maybe he can but not because of his surname.
Though the trails of onomastical erosion, misunderstanding and again
erosion are complicated, replacing an m by an n would be too unusual.
More likely the name developed in the following way:
BERNHARD [from baerenhart = hard as a bear] was a very common christian
name since the early middle ages (Saint BERNHARD of Clairvaux was born
abt. 1090 at Fontaine castle near Dijon). The name was eroded to BENERT
, BENNERT or BEHNERT in northern Germany and to BANNERT or BAHNERT in
more southern regions (in French speaking countries to BERNARD, BÉNARD
and BANARD).
Then there must have been an official misunderstanding. In northern
Germany ö (oe) normaly turns to (plattdeutsch) e. Any priest or parish
official then must have tried to restore the name into "hochdeutsch" and
turned it by misunderstanding from BEHNERT into BÖHNERT. I found several
similar cases in Silesian parish registers where BANNERT was (correctly
though not very sensitively) restored into BERNHARD.
Guenther Boehm
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