Placenames The phrase
Tre, Pol and Pen is used to describe people from, or places in,
Cornwall, the United Kingdom. Carew has
By Tre, Pol and Pen / You shall know the Cornishmen; however,
Camden records the rhyme as
By Tre, Ros, Pol, Lan, Caer and Pen / You may know the most Cornishmen. •
Tre – a settlement or homestead •
Ros(e) – heath, moor •
Pol – a pond, lake or well •
Lan – a religious enclosure •
Car – either from
karn "
tor" or
ker "hill-fort" •
Pen(n),
Pedn – a hill or headland Many
Cornish surnames and place names still retain these words as prefixes, such as the names
Trelawny or
Trevithick and the towns of
Polperro,
Polkerris and of course
Penzance. "Carbines" derives from
karn byghan "little
tor". Caution should be exercised with the derivation of "Car-" surnames as there seems also to be fusion with names containing the word
ker "hill-fort", as in "Carvosso"
ker fosow "walled hill-fort", a placename found in
Ludgvan. There is also
karrek "rocky". "Rosdew" is
ros du "black moor" and "Ros(e)warne" from
ros (g)wern "alder heath" or perhaps "heath by an alder-marsh". "Landry" means
lan dre "enclosure of farmhouse or church-house". Other examples of place-names used as surnames: • Gwavas"
gwavos "winter residence or
bothy"- an area near
Penzance and also the surname of a well-known Cornish family (
William Gwavas) • Hammett: "summer bothy"; from Old Cornish
hav bot (, ). In East Cornwall,
-m- was the Anglo-Saxon representation of the Cornish nasal
-v-. Place-names: Hammett, Hammett Down in the parish of
Quethiock; Great Hammett, Little Hammett in the parish of
St Neot, Cornwall. • Tremethyk:
tre medhyk "doctor's residence or farm" • Trenowden:
Tre Renowden "Renowden's farm"; Renowden is the Cornish form of Renaud or Reginald • Trengrouse:
Tre an Grows, "farm at the cross" • Penprase:
Penn Pras "head of the meadow or common pasture" • Penrose:
Penn Ros(e) "head of the moor" • Solomon:
St Colomb Man From St Columb • Nan(s)- surnames- there are many Nan(s)- surnames in Cornwall, "nan(s)" meaning valley- for example Nankervis from "nans" and "kervys", meaning "valley of the deer/stag" and
Nankivell/Nancekivell "nans" "Cyfel", "the valley of Cyfel" (Cyfel being a personal name) or perhaps from the Old Welsh/Cornish word "ceffyl" a "horse". Nanskeval is located on the parish boundaries of
St Mawgan in Pydar and
St Columb Major. , Cornwall. A possible location whence the surname originated
Trades As in many other parts of Europe, names were used to describe the occupation of the head of the family; "Angove" ( "the Smith"), for example, being the equivalent to the Irish Gowan, Scottish Gow, Breton "Le Goff", "Legoff", "Legoffic", English "Smith", German "Schmidt", Polish "Kowalski", and Italian "Ferrero". Other examples of names derived from trades include "Dyer" ( "thatcher") and "Helyer" ( "hunter"), both of which can be found in English too, i.e. "Thatcher" and "Hunter" respectively, while Dyer itself is also English for someone who dyes clothing. • Cornish, Cornes, Badekoc Korneys (1296) • John Corneys (1327) • Henry Cornysh (1375) The first recorded instance is in the National Dictionary in 1547. It is likely that the Adam Corneys recorded in 1300 is identical to Adam Le Cornwalais recorded in 1275. Other related names to Cornish that designate a Cornish origin include "Cornwall", "Cornwell", "Cornick", "Curnow", "Cornu", "Kernew", "Kernow" etc. (although Cornick may have other origins as well). In previous centuries these names may have alternated along with "Cornwallis" and "Le Cornwalais".
"Welsh" names Especially in West Cornwall, many names typically associated with Welsh are also found. In the Cornish language, ultimately a language linked to Welsh and Breton, the prefix 'map' may have been used, as in Welsh, to indicate the relationship of father to son, this later becoming "ap" (as in NW Breton area, Leon dialect,
Breton WP) and then finally the "p" alone being prefixed to the name, e.g. (m)ap Richard becoming "Pri(t)chard". Another feature of these patronymics was the diminutive suffix "-kin" being added the father's first name e.g. "Tonkin", which may derive from either Anthony or Thomas. • Prowse/Prouse from "map" "ros" meaning "son of the heath" • Prynne "map" "Ryn", "son of Rynne" Surnames found at high frequencies in both Wales and Cornwall include: •
Davies •
Williams •
Evans •
Jones •
Morgan ==Anglicised names and folk etymology==