Tuesday, November 5, 2019
Hispanic Surnames, Meanings, and Origins
Hispanic Surnames, Meanings, and Origins          Does your last name fall into this list of the 100 most common Hispanic surnames? For additional Spanish surname meanings and origins, see Spanish Surname Meanings, 1ââ¬â50.         Continue reading below this list of common Hispanic surnames to learn about Hispanic naming customs, including why most Hispanics have two last names and what those names represent.                     51. MALDONADO  76. DURAN      52. ESTRADA  77. CARRILLO      53. COLON  78. JUAREZ      54. GUERRERO  79. MIRANDA      55. SANDOVAL  80. SALINAS      56. ALVARADO  81. DELEON      57. PADILLA  82. ROBLES      58. NUNEZ  83. VELEZ      59. FIGUEROA  84. CAMPOS      60. ACOSTA  85. GUERRA      61. MARQUEZ  86. AVILA      62. VAZQUEZ  87. VILLARREAL      63. DOMINGUEZ  88. RIVAS      64. CORTEZ  89. SERRANO      65. AYALA  90. SOLIS      66. LUNA  91. OCHOA      67. MOLINA  92. PACHECO      68. ESPINOZA  93. MEJIA      69. TRUJILLO  94. LARA      70. MONTOYA  95. LEON      71. CONTRERAS  96. VELASQUEZ      72. TREVINO  97. FUENTES      73. GALLEGOS  98. CAMACHO      74. ROJAS  99. CERVANTES      75. NAVARRO  100. SALAS               Hispanic Surnames: Why Two Last Names?         The Hispanic double surname system traces back to the nobility class of Castile in the 16th century. The first surname generally comes from the father and is the primary family name, while the second (or last) surname comes from the mother. A man named Gabriel Garcà a Marquez, for example, indicates a fathers first surname of Garcà a and the mothers first surname, Marquez.         Father: Pedroà  Garcà aà  Pà ©rezà  Mother: Madeline Marquezà  Rodrà guezà  Son: Gabrielà  Garcà a Marquez         Portuguese names, including surnames from Brazil where Portuguese is the predominant language, often follow a different pattern than other Spanish speaking countries, with the mothers surname coming first, followed by the fathers name, or primary family name.          How Does Marriage Affect the Surname?      In most Hispanic cultures women generally keep their fathers surname (maiden name) throughout their life. At marriage, many choose to add their husbands surname in place of their mothers surname, sometimes with aà  deà  between their fathers and husbands surnames. Thus, a wife will generally have a different double surname than her husband. Some women also choose to use all three surnames. Because of this, children will have a different double surname than either of their parents, as their name is made up of (as discussed previously) their fathers first surname (the one from his father) and their mothers first surname (the one from her father).         Wife: Madelineà  Marquezà  Rodrà guezà   (Marquez is her fathers first surname,à  Rodrà guez her mothers)Husband:à  Pedroà  Garcà aà  Pà ©rezà  Name After Marriage:à  Madelineà  Marquezà  Pà ©rez orà  Madelineà  Marquez de Pà ©rez          Expect Variants- Especially As You Go Back in Time      During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, Hispanic naming patterns were less consistent. It wasnt unusual, for example, for male children to be given the surname of their father, while females took the surname of their mothers. The double surname system which originated among the Castilian upper classes during the sixteenth centuryà  did not come into common use throughout Spain until the nineteenth century. Thus double surnames in use prior to 1800 may reflect something other than the paternal and maternal surnames, such as a way to distinguish one family with a common surname from others of the same surname. Surnames might also have been chosen from a prominent family or even from grandparents.    
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