Oldest records The earliest documented Basque surnames occur on
Aquitanian inscriptions from the time of the
Roman conquest of Hispania and
Gallia Aquitania. For the most part these can be easily identified with modern or medieval Basque surnames, for example
ENNECONIS (the personal name
Eneko plus the
Latin genitive ending -IS, stem augmented by -N) > Enekoitz. Also
SEMBECONNIS, possibly a derivative of the later surname
Jimenez (
Scemeno attested in the 8–9th century).
V(alerius) BELTESONIS (probable coinage from
beltz 'black', less likely linked to
bele/bela 'crow') engraved on the stella of Andriarriaga located in
Oiartzun bears witness to a mixture of Roman and
Vasconic tradition in the local aristocracy during the Antiquity.
Medieval names García, one of the most frequent
Spanish surnames, was originally a Basque first name stemming from Basque
gartzea, 'the young'. Medieval Basque names follow this descriptive naming pattern about the person, pointing to physical features ("Gutia", "Motza", "Okerra", "Ezkerro", "Zuria", etc.), family relations or geographical origin, e.g. Eneko (Spanish
Íñigo) may be a
hypocoristic mother-to-child addressing, 'my little'. In the Middle Ages, a totemic animal figure often stood for the person's presumable features. ==Grammar and orthography==