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Surname Origins, Their Source and Significations (1875)

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though 'Hermitage' or 'Armitage' ('John Harmaytayge,' W. 3), as local names expressive of his abode, are by no means unfamiliar. Our 'Anchor's' and 'Ankers,' however, still live to commemorate the old ancre or anchorite; he who, as his sobriquet implied, was wont to separate himself from the world's vain pleasures and dwell in seclusion and solitude. In the 'Romance of the Rose' it is said

Sometime I am religious,

Now like an anker in an house.

Piers in his 'Vision,' too, speaks of

Ancres and heremites

That holden them in their celles.

'Hugh le Eremite' or 'Silvester le Hermite' are early forms of the one, while in the other case we find the aspirate added in 'John le Haneker.' The modern dress of this latter, however, presents the usual early and more correct spelling.1 What a vision is presented for our notice in these various sobriquets. It is the vision of a day that has faded, a day with many gleams of redeeming light, but a day of ignorance and lethargy; a day which, after all, thank God, was but the precursor of the brighter day of the Reformation, when the Church, true to herself and true to her destiny, threw off the shackles and the fetters that bound her, and began a work which her greatest foes have been compelled to admit she carried through

1 Capgrave, under date 1293, says: 'In the xxii. yere was Celestius the Fifte, Pope, take fro' his hous, for he was a ankir.' This Celestius at onee passed a law that a Pope might resign, and instantly gave it up, returning to his old life again.

SURNAMES OF OFFICE.

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amid opposition of the deadliest and most crushing kind.

Before passing on to a survey of our feudal aristocracy, I may mention our 'Latimers,' or 'le Latymer,' as I find it recorded in early lists. A latinier, or latimer, was literally a speaker or writer of Latin, that language being then the vehicle of all record or transcript. Latin, indeed, for centuries was the common ground on which all European ecclesiastics met. Thus it became looked upon as the language of interpretation. The term I am speaking of, however, seems to have become general at an early stage. An old lyric says

Lyare was mi latymer,

Sloth and sleep mi bedyner.

Sir John Maundeviile, describing an eastern route, says (I am quoting Mr. Lower) — 'And men alleweys fynden Latyneres to go with them in the contrees and furthere beyonde in to tyme that men conne the language.' Teachers of the Latin tongue itself were not wanting. 'Le Scholemayster ' existed so early as the twelfth century to show that there were those who professed to initiate our English youth in the rudiments of that which was a polite and liberal education in the eyes of that period. Such sobriquets as 'le Gramayre,' or 'Gramary,' or 'Grammer,' represented the same avocation, being nothing more than the old Norman ' Gramayre,' or 'Grammarian' as we should now call him, only we now apply the term to a philologist rather than a professional teacher. As 'Grammar' the surname is far from being obsolete in our midst. A 'Nicholas le Lessoner' is met with in


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