The Gorringe Family History

This website is where you can find out about what happend in my families past, hope everyone enjoys this website because it is my first time making a website so please don't leave any bad comments!!

Tuesday, 20 January 2009

Gorringe family Information

This name is of English locational origin from Goring in Oxfordshire or Sussex. Recorded as Garinges in the Domesday Book of 1086 for the above counties, the name means "(Place) of Gara's people" from the Olde English pre 7th Century personal name Gara containing the elements "gar" a spear, plus "ing" translating variously as "people of" or "dwellers at ". The surname from the latter source is first recorded towards the end of the 12th Century. One Priorissa de Goringe appears in the "Hundred Rolls of Oxford" and a Philip Goring in the "Hundred Rolls of Wiltshire", dated 1273. George Goring (1583 - 1663) negotiated the marriage of Prince Charles with Henrietta Marie of France circa 1623 and became her master of the horse and Baron Goring in 1628. The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of Geoffrey de (of) Garinges, which was dated 1192, in the "Pipe Rolls of Sussex", during the reign of King Richard 1, known as "Richard the Lionheart", 1189 - 1199. Surnames became necessary when governments introduced personal taxation. In England this was known as Poll Tax. Throughout the centuries, surnames in every country have continued to "develop" often leading to astonishing variants of the original spelling.

Gorringe Family History In The 11th Century.

The name Gorringe reached England in the great wave of Migration following the Norman Conquest of 1066.The Gorringe family lived in the places named Goring in Oxfordshire and sussex. The place-name was originally derived from the old english word Garingas, which means people of Gara. This name is a short form of various compound names with the first portion Gar, which means spear.



Anglo-Norman names tend to be marked by an enormous number of spelling variations.This is largely due to the fact that old and middle english lacked any spelling rules when norman french was introduced in the 11th century. The languages of the english courts at that time were french and latin. These various languages mixed quite freely in the evolving social milieu (which is a french word for enviroment). The final element of this mix is that medieval scribes spelled words according to their sounds rather that any definite rules, so a name was often spelled in as many different ways as the number of documents it appeared in. The name was spelled Goring, Gorring, Goringe, Gorringe, Goreing, Goreng, GÖring, Goringet, Geur, Gerling and many other variations.

First found in sussex where they were anciently seated as Lords of the Manor of Goring.

Because of the political and religious discontent in england, families began to migrate abroad in enormous numbers. Faced with percecution and starvation at home, the open frontiers and generaly less opressive social enviroment of the new world seemed tantalizing indeed to many English people. The trip was difficult, and not all made it unscathed, but many of those who did get to canada and the United States made important contributions to the young nations in which they settled. Some of the first north american settlers with Gorringe name or one of it's variants: Joseph Gorring who settled in Baltimore, Maryland 1820; Elizabeth Gorring settled in Virginia in 1677.