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Lincoln Genealogy and Lincoln Family History Information

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Profiles

  • Abiah Lincoln (b. - 1817)
  • Abiah Lincoln (1732 - 1825)
    Reference: FamilySearch Genealogy - SmartCopy : Sep 10 2023, 20:56:58 UTC * Reference: FamilySearch Genealogy - SmartCopy : Sep 10 2023, 21:02:39 UTC
  • Abigail Lincoln (c.1797 - 1878)
  • Abigail Lincoln (Andrews) (1729 - 1793)
    ID: I5093 Name: Abigail ANDREWS Surname: Andrews Given Name: Abigail Sex: F Birth: 6 Jun 1729 in Hingham, MA Death: Oct 1793 Reference Number: 2 _UID: 1423748DFF33D81198960040F41C0E47269D Note: 1 NAME ...
  • Abigail Lincoln (1742 - d.)

About the Lincoln surname

origin

LIncolnshire, England

This ancient surname of Lincoln is of English locational origin. It derives from the city of Lincoln, the county town of Lincolnshire. First recorded as Lindo in the earliest known surviving charter called "Claudii Ptolemaei Geographia", a Roman gazette dated about the year 150 a.d., it is said that Lindo is identical in meaning with the Welsh "llyn", a lake.This is not surprising as Lincoln was the northern capital of the fen country, later known as East Anglia, a region which from the begining of time up to the 17th century was several hundred square miles of lakes and marshes. Lincoln is first recorded in the fused form of Lindocolina in the famous work of the Rev. Bede known as "Historia Ecclesiastica," in about 730 a.d.

The second element derives from the Latin word "colonia", meaning a colony or settlement. Lincoln was an important administrative centre during the Roman occupation of Britain, and remained so for a thousand years. Locational surnames were usually "from" names. That is to say names given to people after they left their original homes, to move somewhere else. In this case Adam de Lincoln appears in the Poll Tax Returns for the county of Yorkshire in 1379, whilst later William Lincoln is recorded in the Oxford University Register dated 1537.

The Surname Linkhorn later often changed to Lincoln and the first part is from variant spellings Link, Linck, Lince and Linch is of English topographic origin for one dwelling by a bank or slope. The derivation is from the Olde English pre 7th Century "hlinc" translating variously as "a bank separating strips of arable land on a slope, rising ground or a ridge". Dialectual variants of "hlinc" included "linch" and "lench".

The name horn could come from someone who made objects out of horn or a horn blower. It also may be from someone who lived in the settlement of Horn(e) or near a spur or toungue of land.

Norfolk, England

The earliest record of the name Lincoln is of a Sir Thomas Lingeole. The name is so spelled with slight variations as late as the reign of Queen Elizabeth, who in 1298 gave to the high alter of the church of St. Mary in Norwich England " a teper of wax, a lamp, and the rent of Colegate." Sir THomas was the owner and farmer of Colegate. Commemorating this benefaction the church installed a mural tablet which was recently discovered. Lincoln ancestory starts in England and records show that many generations lived in and around Hingham, County of Norfolk.

other versions of this surname