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Wiadomość |
GTostasz |
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Temat postu: Nazwisko Baszczok
Wysłany: 19-10-2024 - 11:19
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Dołączył: 19-04-2024
Posty: 56
Status: Offline
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Hello everyone, I wonder what the origins and meaning of the surname Baszczok is, it sounds very polish. I know that my great grandfather Konrad Baszczok came from around Rybnik, I see many german forenames with this surname on the geneszukacz database in Silesia. My mother also said that this was the german bloodline from my father's side which made him aquire german citizenship around 20 years ago. |
_________________ Giovanni
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Wladyslaw_Moskal |
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Temat postu: Nazwisko Baszczok
Wysłany: 19-10-2024 - 21:18
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Dołączył: 25-04-2008
Posty: 1582
Status: Offline
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Hello Giovanni, the origins and meaning of the surname Baszczok from Silesia is very interesting.
By the MyHeritage website Forebears.io in 2014 y. very rare surname Baszczok was held only by 229 people in Poland and 19 people in Germany.
In my opinion, the name Baszczok is a variant of very old Slavic-Galic[Celtic] surnames Bajszczak [only in Poland 431 people and in France 10 people] and Bayszczak [only in France 10 people].
BAJSZCZAK/BAYSZCZAK - BASZCZAK [Poland 142 people] - BASZCZOK [ Poland 229 people].
The meaning of surnames Bajszczak and Bayszczak is not listed on Forebears. Polish scientists claim that the surname Bajszczak comes from the Polish word “bajarz” = storyteller which corresponds to present French word “troubadour”, so Baszczok = story teller.
Wladyslaw |
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GTostasz |
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Temat postu: Re: Nazwisko Baszczok
Wysłany: 19-10-2024 - 22:01
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Dołączył: 19-04-2024
Posty: 56
Status: Offline
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Wladyslaw_Moskal napisał:
Hello Giovanni, the origins and meaning of the surname Baszczok from Silesia is very interesting.
By the MyHeritage website Forebears.io in 2014 y. very rare surname Baszczok was held only by 229 people in Poland and 19 people in Germany.
In my opinion, the name Baszczok is a variant of very old Slavic-Galic[Celtic] surnames Bajszczak [only in Poland 431 people and in France 10 people] and Bayszczak [only in France 10 people].
BAJSZCZAK/BAYSZCZAK - BASZCZAK [Poland 142 people] - BASZCZOK [ Poland 229 people].
The meaning of surnames Bajszczak and Bayszczak is not listed on Forebears. Polish scientists claim that the surname Bajszczak comes from the Polish word “bajarz” = storyteller which corresponds to present French word “troubadour”, so Baszczok = story teller.
Wladyslaw
Wow, thats really interesting, thank you very much for the information! |
_________________ Giovanni
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Tadeusz_Wysocki |
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Temat postu: Re: Nazwisko Baszczok
Wysłany: 20-10-2024 - 10:51
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Dołączył: 23-02-2007
Posty: 931
Skąd: Warszawa
Status: Offline
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Hello Gentlemen,
Wladyslaw, my best friend, you are absolutely right, the surname BASZCZOK is very interesting, and rare in Poland, and it's not listed in the Dictionary od the Polish Names firmed by PAN Polish Academy of Sciences: https://nazwiska.ijp.pan.pl/ - and your hint with 'bajarz'='story teller' is very valuable.
If I can add the second possible version of the origins and meaning of the surname BASZCZOK. I've found with some other etymological sources the following information: https://narodowa.pl/exhibits/edukacja-i ... tymologia/ (please click on the English flag on the top of the page) -
- with point 4. Kazimierz Rymut (1935 Chechły os. Ropczyce-2006 Kraków), linguist, onomastician, professor of humanities, etymologist, main editor of monumental works: the multi-volume Polish Surnames – Historical and Etymological Dictionary (published by DWN, volume I AK, 1999, volume II L-Ż, 2001), and Polish Place Names – History – Origin – Changes (published by IJP PAN from volume I AB, 1996…): Volume I A-K https://www.bibliotekacyfrowa.pl/dlibra ... anguage=pl - on the page 23 the surname BASZCZOK is given with the information that it derived from the very old Polish base surname BASZ - noted in Poland from the year 1388, and derived from Polish names started with Ba- like Barbara, Bartłomiej, etc.
And the secound source with points 5.1 and 5.2 are giving the possibility od finding the oldest archival document in Poland with that surname:
5. Zofia Kowalik-Kaleta , linguist, etymologist, professor, long-time employee of IJP PAN, author of numerous works, including “History of Polish Surnames in the Social and Customary Background (12th-15th Century)” , Institute of Slavic Studies PAN, Warsaw 2007, co-author of “ Dictionary of the Oldest Polish Surnames of Linguistic Origin (12th-15th Century)”, Institute of Slavic Studies PAN, Warsaw 2007.
5.1 History of Polish Surnames in the Social and Customary Background (12th-15th Century) : https://rcin.org.pl/dlibra/doccontent?id=39455
5.2 Dictionary of the Oldest Polish Surnames Linguistic Origin (12th-15th Century) : https://rcin.org.pl/Content/38217/PDF/W ... W_0000.pdf
Final hint: The base surname of BASZCZOK is BASZ, with the second book 5.2 page 12. and the first book 5.1 - the origin as the christian name Bartłomiej with the first document in Poland giving the archival note: "Maciej Basz (Bartlomiej), source MCh 192: "Matias dictus Bas de Karczouin" 1388, Kraków 4837.
One remark with the surname BASZCZOK - suffix -ok = this is very tipical for the Sliesian surnames.
Dear Giovanni, sorry large reply, but maybe this would be encouragement for you and for anyone who want to explore the surname with the etymological sources.
Finally, with the game of imagination, what would be the surname gens that passed over to the present family trait? If from the Polish rname Bartłomiej the meaning is with English:
Bartłomiej - Bartholomew - is a name of Aramaic origin. It comes from the words: bar (son) and tholomai - which is a male name meaning a ploughman or warrior. The meaning of the name Bartholomew is: son of a ploughman or son of a warrior.
Dear Giovanni - be careful, with your family genes you are a brave warrior in your life - is that true?
Greetings!
Tadeusz
www.narodowa.pl |
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GTostasz |
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Temat postu: Re: Nazwisko Baszczok
Wysłany: 21-10-2024 - 10:41
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Dołączył: 19-04-2024
Posty: 56
Status: Offline
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Tadeusz_Wysocki napisał:
Hello Gentlemen,
Wladyslaw, my best friend, you are absolutely right, the surname BASZCZOK is very interesting, and rare in Poland, and it's not listed in the Dictionary od the Polish Names firmed by PAN Polish Academy of Sciences: https://nazwiska.ijp.pan.pl/ - and your hint with 'bajarz'='story teller' is very valuable.
If I can add the second possible version of the origins and meaning of the surname BASZCZOK. I've found with some other etymological sources the following information: https://narodowa.pl/exhibits/edukacja-i ... tymologia/ (please click on the English flag on the top of the page) -
- with point 4. Kazimierz Rymut (1935 Chechły os. Ropczyce-2006 Kraków), linguist, onomastician, professor of humanities, etymologist, main editor of monumental works: the multi-volume Polish Surnames – Historical and Etymological Dictionary (published by DWN, volume I AK, 1999, volume II L-Ż, 2001), and Polish Place Names – History – Origin – Changes (published by IJP PAN from volume I AB, 1996…): Volume I A-K https://www.bibliotekacyfrowa.pl/dlibra ... anguage=pl - on the page 23 the surname BASZCZOK is given with the information that it derived from the very old Polish base surname BASZ - noted in Poland from the year 1388, and derived from Polish names started with Ba- like Barbara, Bartłomiej, etc.
And the secound source with points 5.1 and 5.2 are giving the possibility od finding the oldest archival document in Poland with that surname:
5. Zofia Kowalik-Kaleta , linguist, etymologist, professor, long-time employee of IJP PAN, author of numerous works, including “History of Polish Surnames in the Social and Customary Background (12th-15th Century)” , Institute of Slavic Studies PAN, Warsaw 2007, co-author of “ Dictionary of the Oldest Polish Surnames of Linguistic Origin (12th-15th Century)”, Institute of Slavic Studies PAN, Warsaw 2007.
5.1 History of Polish Surnames in the Social and Customary Background (12th-15th Century) : https://rcin.org.pl/dlibra/doccontent?id=39455
5.2 Dictionary of the Oldest Polish Surnames Linguistic Origin (12th-15th Century) : https://rcin.org.pl/Content/38217/PDF/W ... W_0000.pdf
Final hint: The base surname of BASZCZOK is BASZ, with the second book 5.2 page 12. and the first book 5.1 - the origin as the christian name Bartłomiej with the first document in Poland giving the archival note: "Maciej Basz (Bartlomiej), source MCh 192: "Matias dictus Bas de Karczouin" 1388, Kraków 4837.
One remark with the surname BASZCZOK - suffix -ok = this is very tipical for the Sliesian surnames.
Dear Giovanni, sorry large reply, but maybe this would be encouragement for you and for anyone who want to explore the surname with the etymological sources.
Finally, with the game of imagination, what would be the surname gens that passed over to the present family trait? If from the Polish rname Bartłomiej the meaning is with English:
Bartłomiej - Bartholomew - is a name of Aramaic origin. It comes from the words: bar (son) and tholomai - which is a male name meaning a ploughman or warrior. The meaning of the name Bartholomew is: son of a ploughman or son of a warrior.
Dear Giovanni - be careful, with your family genes you are a brave warrior in your life - is that true?
Greetings!
Tadeusz
www.narodowa.pl
Very interesting, especially knowing that it is documented, I only coulnd't find page 12 in book 5.2 and the book of the first link is sadly not accesible through my own university license.
Well I think those warrior genes have become thin a long time ago haha, I myself carry the surname Ostasz derived from the earlier documented surname of my paternal lineage: Staszyna/Сташины.
https://regestry.lubgens.eu/viewpage.php?page_id=1057
Sadly people's aktes written in old slavonic are not being indexed at all on this website, so I can't trace the lineage back to its true origins. |
_________________ Giovanni
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Tadeusz_Wysocki |
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Temat postu: Re: Nazwisko Baszczok
Wysłany: 22-10-2024 - 09:19
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Dołączył: 23-02-2007
Posty: 931
Skąd: Warszawa
Status: Offline
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My fault, all things in our wonderful life must to be started more precisely:
Base surname BASZ, with book 5.2 - page 12 - giving trace to book 5.1 with pages 265 and 273, thus you can find first shot with first record in old Polish archives:
with e.g. page 265 "Mathias dictus Bas de Karczouin", year 1388. source "Krak 4837" = and the shortanage Krak is explained in book 5.1 on page 420:
Krak = "Antiquissimi libri iudiciales terrare Cracoviensis. (Najdawniejsze księgo sądowe krakowskie). I-II. Editionem curavit B. Ulanowski. I. 1374-1390. StPPP VIII/!, year 1884, ss. XXII + 362 + 24 + tabl. I-VI. II. 1394-1400. StPPP VIII/2, year 1866, ss. II + 363-982 + 25-40 + tabl. VII-XII.
Base surname OSTASZ, with book 5.2 - page 111 - from name Ostasz, this from christian east-Slavic name AWSTACY - noted from the year 1392, page 279 (this is the same kind of trace to book 5.1 - on this page 279 you can find: "Tomek Ostapiec"... with the first archival record as: "Stanislaus et Thomko dictus Ostapecz, heredes in Chvarstnicza", year 1391. source: Lek I 897, and Lek is given in book 5.1 on the page 421 = "Die altesten grosspolnischen Grodbucher. I-II. Hg. V.J. Lekszycki
I. Posen 1386-1399. Publicationen aus den Koniglichen Preusssichen staatsarchiven XXXI. Leipzig 1887, ss. XVIII + 417.
AWSTACY surname genes? Source could be researched with my page Narodowa.pl giving base links: https://narodowa.pl/exhibits/ciekawe-li ... -do-ga-pa/
Good luck,
Tadeusz
www.narodowa.pl |
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