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surnames « Top of the Campops: 60 things you didn't know about family, marriage, work, and death since the middle ages

Top of the Campops: 60 things you didn't know about family, marriage, work, and death since the middle ages

Posts Tagged ‘surnames’

You’re not from these parts, are you?

Thursday, September 26th, 2024

Kevin Schürer

John Leech, ‘Bits from the mining districts‘ (1868).

The John Leech cartoon above, published in 1868 and entitled Bits from the mining districts, bears the following caption: 

First polite native – ‘Who’s ‘im, Bill?’ 

Second polite native – ‘A stranger!’ 

First polite native – ‘ ‘Eave ‘arfa brick at ‘im’.

Whilst obviously sarcastic, the underlying context is clear. Outsiders – those not from these parts – are treated with caution, if not distrust and open hostility. Yet mining communities, often being mono-cultural in terms of employment, were known for being tight-knit, closed, maybe inward looking, and the stranger of this cartoon was not only ‘not from these parts’, but also clearly socially distant judging from the way he is dressedYet, how wide-ranging were such notions of xenophobia – literally fear of strangers – in the past?  

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Mrs Man: Why do women take their husbands’ surnames?

Thursday, July 11th, 2024

Amy Erickson

Thomas Gainsborough
Mr and Mrs Andrews
about 1750. Courtesy The National Gallery.

The habit of women taking a husband’s surname is seen by some as reflecting ancient patriarchal control of women, and by others as a romantic custom symbolising unity. But there is nothing either ancient or romantic about it: the practice has a very specific history. 

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