[Ger-Poland-Volhynia] Anybody ever see the surname Ratt? Taron
Otto
otto at schienke.com
Tue Oct 30 10:05:08 PDT 2007
Afternoon Karl,
You asked:
" If it matters, the name Taron is likely of French Huegenot origin.
Anyone have any good explanations what is going on here? Did everyone
just forget her real maiden name or is there something else going on
I don't recognize?"
Maybe I can add to the confusion. . .
Ratt/Radt (wheel) could well be a shortened form of Rattke/Radtke
(little wheel or offspring of wheel)
Taron/Tarrun remains a challenge.
Your dates of the early mid-1800's connected to name change may make
the Huguenot identity questionable seeing the Huguenot settlement
occurred in the 1700's. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huguenot
If you pursue the 'French connection', I would give serious attention
to the beginning of the 1800's and the armies of Napoleon. They were
not under present day military battlefield confrontations of 'you can
run, but you cannot hide' satellite observation . Generals back then
would place their cannoneers behind the infantry and mow them down if
they tried to flee. To lose 100,000 men to 'the woods' was not
uncommon. Even mounted cavalry officers found this useful to
survival. A name change for those who stayed was helpful to living a
few more years... Saying "Good day" in Polish also helped greatly.
Also, Ratt or Radtke may have been the surname.
There well could have existed a confusing of Karoline Ratt/Radtke
from Torun/Thorn with Ratt/Tarrun
etymolgy: this may help in deciphering translations of the term.
-cut&paste-
Proto-IE: *taron- <PIH *-rH->
Slavic: *t[ā]ronъ, *tъronъ: Kash tarȯn, trȯn (Sychta)
Germanic: *ʮunr-a- m., *ʮunr- m. (click)
Celtic: Gaul (in Lat.) Taranis `thunder god'; Ir torann `thunder,
thunder god'; Cymr taran id., OCorn taran id., Bret. taran id.
Russ. meaning: гром, бог-громовержец
The name 'Taron' is also of a district in Armenia
. . . Otto
" The Zen moment..." wk. of October 28, 2007-
________________________________
"Life continues. . . only from breath to breath."
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