Did Your Ancestors Have Multiple Names?

Rufnamen: Given name or German name; a person’s main given name by which they are usually known and called.

Before the 13th century A.D. ordinary German people were given only one Rufnamen. After the 13th century it became common to give a child two given names at baptism, although at times only one name was given.

But some children were christened with three or more given names. That practice was not common, but it did occur. Multiple given names were often the names of parents, other relatives, or baptismal sponsors. Many of these multiple names were dropped as the child matured and later records do not always use all the names the child was given at birth.

One German branch of my family, the Breuningers, liked to use multiple given names when naming their children.

In the 17th and 18th centuries, these Breuningers used just two names, like normal Germans. There was Hans Jacob Breuninger (1679-1758) and his son, Hans Ludwig Breuninger (1726-1782).

It was Hans Ludwig Breuninger who began giving his children three names. He named his daughter Anna Maria Catharina Breuninger (1762-1762) and his son Johann Eberhardt Heinrich Breuninger (1764-1823).

Johann Eberhardt Heinrich Breuninger (1764-1823) continued the tradition and christened three of his four children with three names: Johann Martin Friedrich Breuninger (1792-1858), Rosina Catharina Barbara Breuninger (1795-1795), and Rosina Catharina Barbara Breuninger (1796-1796). Yes, the two daughters had the same names. The first died in infancy and it was a common practice to reuse the name of a child who had died.

Johann Martin Friedrich Breuninger

The above Johann Martin Friedrich Breuninger (1792-1858) took giving his children multiple names to a whole new level, especially for his daughters. His children:

Carl Ludwig Friedrich Breuninger (called Carl) (1818-?)
Louis Frederick Peter Breuninger (called Louis) (1819-1890) [my gr-gr-grandfather]
Elisabeth Charlotte Juliana Louisa Breuninger (called “Eliza”) (1821-1872)
Johann Friedrich Ernst Breuninger (1822-1824)
Charlotte Elise Magdalena Breuninger (called Charlotte) (1824-1876)
Johann Christian Friedrich Ernst Breuninger (1826-?)
Charlotte Juliana Ernestina Wilhelmina Eleanora Breuninger (1828-1883)
Eva Charlotta Ernestina Eleanora Wilhelmina Breuninger (called “Lora”) (1831-1896)
Ernestina Frederika Elonora Breuninger (1833-1834)

That was pretty much the end of the multiple naming trend in my Breuninger family.

Except for daughter Charlotte Juliana Ernestina Wilhelmina Eleanora Breuninger (1828-1883), who remained in Germany although her siblings immigrated to America. She married Ernst Julius Huber and they continued the multiple name trend with their children, Ernst Julius Otto Wolfgang Huber, Friederike Ottilie Clara Julia Huber, and Julius Ernst Friedrich Wolfgang Otto Huber. Her siblings ceased using multiple given names in America.

“Louis” Friedrich Peter Breuninger (1819-1890)

What about all those names?

Before the Reformation, Roman Catholics were urged to name children after saints, martyrs, and angels. After the Reformation, Protestants used Biblical names to name their children, most names coming from the Old Testament.  

German children were usually given two names. Boys were usually baptized with the first name of Johannes/Johann/Hans and girls were usually baptized with the first name of Maria, Anna, or Anna Maria.

But they did not go by their first name. They went by and were known by their middle name and their surname. Their middle name was also used in legal records.

A family may have had children named Johann Friedrich, Johann Martin, Johann Ludwig, Maria Catharine, and Maria Barbara, but the children were known as Friedrich, Martin, Ludwig, Catharine, and Barbara.

Children were almost always named for one or more of their baptismal sponsors in German-speaking areas.

There are naming patters, too, but children were not always named in the following manner, so you can’t necessarily determine parentage this way:

  • first born, named after father’s father
  • second born, after mother’s father
  • third born, after father of the child
  • fourth born and on, after uncles of the child

The same pattern applies to daughters but using the maternal side (father’s mother, mother’s mother, etc.).

Names are interesting and knowing how they were used may help with your research.

The Twelve Days of Christmas

We are in the midst of the Twelve Days of Christmas. It is still the Christmas Season and will be until Epiphany, 6 January. Epiphany, the day the three wise men arrived in Bethlehem for Jesus’ birth, is also known as Twelfth Night, Day of the Magi, Three King’s Day, or Eid al-Ghitas. I had never heard of that last name before.

For me, the Twelve Days of Christmas is a good thing. It is a breather after Christmas and a time to enjoy our Christmas decorations a little longer. I put up artificial trees, so I don’t have to worry about a dry evergreen tree dropping needles. Some consider it bad luck to take down the Christmas tree before Epiphany. That is not a problem here.

At home, growing up, we left our decorations up until New Years Day. We usually had some family gatherings the week between Christmas and New Years Day. My Schumm side of the family, grandparents, aunts and uncles, and cousins, had their Christmas dinner that week, so we kept the decorations up for that.

Christmas at Cornelius & Hilda Schumm home, c1963.

Since it is totally acceptable to leave the Christmas finery out until Epiphany, I don’t rush to take down my decorations. Actually, some Christmas decorations may still be out on display in our basement for weeks after Epiphany. I change out the basement decor for the season, but I have scaled back to just three seasons, Patriotic, Halloween, and Christmas. That works very well and is minimal work. My Patriotic Season doesn’t begin until May so I still have plenty of time to put the Christmas decorations away down there.

At any rate, during each Christmas Season I enjoy the song, The Twelve Days of Christmas. It is a centuries-old song that is still popular today. The original song may have had French origins, but first appeared in print in an English children’s book in 1780. The gifts in the song are partridges, turtle doves, French hens, calling birds, golden rings, geese, swans, maids, ladies, lords, pipers, and drummers. Originally, the four calling birds were called colly birds, colly being old English slang for a blackbird, and the partridge in a pear tree was originally a peacock. Today’s version of the lyrics was created in 1909.

The Twelve Days of Christmas music

A question at Christmas party this year was how many gifts would you receive if you got all the gifts in the song. The answer takes a little more calculating than you think at first. The gifts are cumulative. You give each previous gift with each subsequent gift. That is, on each new day, you receive all the gifts previously given. That would be 12 partridges, 22 turtle doves, 30 French hens, etc, making the total number of gifts 364. Interesting that the number is one gift shy of a gift a day for a whole year. Of the 364 gifts, 184 are birds. Someone liked our feathered friends.

I did not figure all this out myself. The answer to almost everything is online and I do not like to think that hard for fun anymore. And for the mathematicians out there, the solution to the question involves Triangular and Tetrahedral Numbers and Triangular-based Pyramids. I’m not sure what all that even means.

What would all those gifts cost today? In 2024 the cost would have been $201,973. That cost should not be a surprise, with swans costing $1875 each and gold over $2600 an ounce.

Some believe there is a hidden Christian meaning to the song, used to secretly pass on Christian ideology.

Partridge in a pear tree=Jesus
Two Turtle Doves=Old and New Testaments
Three French Hens=Faith, Hope, and Charity (theological virtues)
Four Calling Birds=the four Gospels and/or the four evangelists
Five Golden Rings=the first five books of the Old Testament
Six Geese a-laying=the six days of creation
Seven Swans A-swimming=the gifts of the Holy Spirit/the seven sacraments
Eight Maids A-milking=the eight beatitudes
Nine Ladies Dancing=the nine fruits of the Holy Spirit
Ten Lords A-leaping=the Ten Commandments
Eleven Pipers Piping=the eleven faithful apostles
Twelve Drummers Drumming=the twelve points of doctrine in the Apostle’s Creed

We are on day 10 of the song today, Ten Lords a-leaping, plus all the other gifts from days 1-9. That’s a quite a crowd and a lot of poultry.

It’s a very catchy Christmas song and now I know what those Calling Birds really are.

Happy New Year!

Happy New Year from Karen’s Chatt!

The holiday season is nearly over and another year comes to an end. Today is the last day of 2024 and at midnight we welcome 2025.

Out with the old year, in with the new year. A new year, a new beginning, new resolutions, new hopes.

Wishing everyone a happy, healthy, and prosperous 2025, filled with love, peace, and joy. 

Oranges at Christmastime

When I was in elementary school at Willshire, probably during the first three or four grades, just before Christmas Santa would visit the school and give each a student a gift, a little brown paper bag with an orange in it. There may have also been an apple and a candy cane in the bag, but I distinctly remember the orange.

Oranges

It was a real treat. I was excited to get the gift from Santa, even if it was only an orange. A gift is a gift and oranges are a sweet, tasty fruit treat.

Last week I featured some letters to Santa that were written in 1917. Most of the children at that time asked for fruit and candy. When they asked for fruit, they were likely asking for oranges.

Oranges have long been a popular Christmas gift, often put in a Christmas stocking. In some areas and at certain times, like during the Great Depression, oranges were a rare, special treat that may have been the only gifts under the Christmas tree.

There is an old tale behind the tradition of oranges as Christmas gifts.

Saint Nicholas, aka Santa Claus, was the son of a wealthy merchant who later became a bishop. He lived near a man with three daughters. When the man fell on hard times, Saint Nicholas secretly threw three bags of gold through his window. A bag of gold landed in each daughter’s stocking, stockings that were hanging on the mantle to dry. People eventually learned the identity of the gift giver, called him Saint Nicholas, and oranges came to represent the bags of gold he gave. An orange placed in the toe of the stocking was used to represent good fortune for the recipient.  

Oranges also symbolize giving and sharing during the holiday season because the orange segments can easily be shared with others.

Oranges

Yes, oranges are a symbol of Christmas, a common item included in holiday fruit baskets, and a popular winter fruit.

Merry Christmas!

The Nativity, on wood.

For to us a child is born, to us a son is given, and the government will be on his shoulders, and he will be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace. Isaiah 9:6

Merry Christmas from Karen’s Chatt!

Wishing you and your family all the blessings of Christmas!